Summer 2011 - McGeorge School of Law
Transcription
Summer 2011 - McGeorge School of Law
NonProfit Organization the publication of the universit y of the pacific mcgeorge school of l aw U.S. Postage Paid Sacramento, California 3200 Fifth Avenue Permit No. 904 Sacramento, California 95817 Summer 2011 www.mcgeorge.edu Face to Face with the U.S. Supreme Court ONE PERSON CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE EXPLORE What you can do for Pacific McGeorge students. Calendar of Events For details on these and other events, please see the Alumni and News & Events sections on the Pacific McGeorge web site www.mcgeorge.edu or call 916.739.7141 May 18, 2011 Essential Lawyering Skills: Legal Research & Writing Pacific McGeorge May 24, 2011 Sacramento Alumni Chapter Reception Crocker Art Museum May 25, 2011 Bakersfield Alumni Chapter Reception The Padre Hotel, Bakersfield May 26, 2011 San Diego Alumni Chapter Reception Best, Best & Krieger, San Diego June 23-25, 2011 Association of Legal Writing Directors Biennial Conference Pacific McGeorge August 18, 2011 Annual Welcome Back Barbecue Pacific McGeorge September 17, 2011 Legal Studies Center Grand Opening Pacific McGeorge Chair: $500 Shelving Unit: $5k-$15k Study Room: $25k-$75k Large Study Table: $10k Pacific McGeorge (See mcgeorge.edu, Campus Event Spotlight) Leave a Lasting Legacy in Pacific McGeorge History Renovation of the Gordon D. Schaber Law Library – centerpiece of the new Pacific McGeorge Legal Studies Center (LSC) – is almost complete. Take this opportunity to leave a lasting legacy by giving a gift that secures your right to attach your name or that of someone special to Pacific McGeorge’s future. Many naming opportunities are still available. You can name a study room, a study carrel, a shelving unit, a chair, or even the Rotunda – the law school’s original classroom. Contact the Advancement Office today to see how your investment in the LSC will inspire students, alumni, and our campus community for years to come. Join those who have already named an area or room in the LSC: • Alumni Board of Directors (Current and Past Members) • McGeorge Rugby Club • Nevada Alumni • The Fletcher Jones Foundation • The Hugh & Hazel Darling Foundation October 7-9 and 14-16, 2011 Executive Training Program in Mediation October 11, 2011 Capital Center for Public Law & Policy Ethics Luncheon The Sutter Club, Sacramento October 15, 2011 Reunion: Classes of 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006 Pacific McGeorge January 21, 2012 Alumni Association’s Southern California MCLE The Grand, Long Beach January 28, 2012 Alumni Association’s Sacramento MCLE Pacific McGeorge Scan this QR Code with your smart phone to visit the LSC website. go.mcgeorge.edu/lsc Pacific McGeorge Office of Advancement | 3200 Fifth Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95817 | 916.739.7300 June 4, 2012 U.S. Supreme Court Swearing-In Ceremony Washington, D.C. Pacific Law Magazine is published by University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Office of Strategic Marketing and Communications 3200 Fifth Avenue Sacramento, California 95817 916.739.7197 916.739.7384 Fax www.mcgeorge.edu Member The Order of the Coif Member The Association of American Law Schools Accredited by The American Bar Association and the Committee of Bar Examiners, State Bar of California Editor Michael Curran Editorial Committee Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker, Dean; Barbara Thomas, Director, Alumni Relations & Campus Events; Charlene Mattison, Assistant Dean for Advancement; David Alan Gibb, Consultant Principal Photography Steve Yeater, John Blaustein Acknowledgments Courtney Nowling, Lovelle Harris, Bethany Daniels, Lori Hall, Sally Cebreros, Megan Laurie, Matthew Downs, Lexis Allen Printing Citadel Communications Design NeoDesign 2011 © University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Message from The Dean T Illustration: Jack Unruh hese are busy times, but even so, I hope you’ll spend a few minutes reviewing this issue of Pacific Law. You won’t regret it. I’ve just read it cover-to-cover and found it quite a page- turner. It was exciting to read about our community in action— from featured stories to alumni notes. I was captivated by our story on the four alums who recently argued before the U.S. Supreme Court. Their recollections brought back my own arguments as if they were yesterday and they’ll transport you, as well. If you’ve even wondered what it’s like to argue in the highest court of the land, don’t miss the reflections of Michael Bigelow, Harry Colombo, Todd Marshall and Zachery Morazzini. They’ll make you proud to be part of the Pacific McGeorge community. Turning the page, I was captivated again reading the “behind the scenes” story of how a small band of alums have developed remarkable expertise in influencing the political and legislative arena. In doing so, Steve Merksamer, Lance Olson, Chip Nielsen, Barry Fadem, Mark Meckler and Sal Russo have developed a new brand of government law, becoming power brokers at a state and national level which makes for fascinating reading. Not to be outdone, this issue highlights faculty contributions which are making national and international news. Our new Global Legal Studies Program, which Professors Mary-Beth Moylan and Stephanie Thompson lead, will shine a light on the important work our faculty is doing to deepen the real-world preparation our students receive. Proof of their good work finds evidence in the great success our Advocacy Program is achieving—no surprise that Professor Cary Bricker, a pillar in this program, has been singled out as a finalist in a national teaching award competition, or that Professors Linda Carter and John Sprankling would receive the two highest University faculty awards this year. The in-depth profile of Professor Emily Garcia Uhrig, one of our new generation of faculty, will reassure you that our tradition of academic excellence with a real world focus is in excellent shape. And you’ll find even more good news as you investigate the alumni news. All of this brings me to my own role in this growing list of Pacific McGeorge accomplishments. As you may know, last month I announced my decision to step down as dean in June 2012. This was a difficult decision which required considerable thought. I have loved every minute of my nine years as dean and I look forward to my last year as well. In deciding to announce my decision to step down now, however, I was mindful of the importance of a successful transition to the future of the Law School. I hope my timing will give the Pacific McGeorge community the time it needs to select the next dean who, I have no doubt, will lead us to the next level of excellence. Such transitions are important to maintaining the balance and separation between individual and institutional goals necessary for any successful institution which aspires to greatness — as certainly Pacific McGeorge does. A successful institution must have its own life, irrespective of who may be the dean at any given period. In stepping down next year, I leave the Law School in an exceptionally strong position: the faculty has just approved an excellent new strategic plan about which you will soon hear more; we have a superb faculty, strengthened by hiring almost one quarter new members in the last decade; our students are ever more qualified and our superb senior leadership team will remain in place under Associate Dean Julie Davies’ leadership through this important transition. Most importantly, we have superb new University leadership that has already shown its appreciation of the Law School’s leadership role in our community. I believe we have a remarkable opportunity to bring in new leadership with the vision to take the Law School to the next level, building on all that has been accomplished to this point--and taking advantage of your continuing support! There will be time to talk further about the Law School and its bright future over the next year and I look forward to meeting with many of you to do just that. For now, however, I want to express my thanks for the wonderful opportunity and pleasure of serving as Pacific McGeorge’s dean. It has, indeed, been the best job of my career! With warm regards, Dean Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 1 PACIFIC cover story f e at u r e s 4 Face to Face 8 with the Supreme Court Four Alumni Take Their Cases to the High Court and an Electrifying Moment They Take The Initiative Pacific McGeorge Alumni Play Critical Roles in Crafting California’s Ballot Measures TEA PARTY 10 Stirring Up A Political Firestorm Russo, Meckler Set The Table Nationally For Tea Party d e pa r t m e n t s 1 12 Message from the Dean School News Citizenship Fair Best Season in History Kennedy On Campus Major Medical Story University Awards Busy Spring Semester 2 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 ACIFIC LAW 16 Augmenting Experiential Learning Programs 18 Faculty News Levine’s 25 Years Yelpaala Urges Africa Calvert Alma Mater Paton ABA Commission Best Law Teachers Book Landers’ Article Wins Sprankling Thesis Malloy Lifts Fog 22 Faculty Profile Emily Garcia Uhrig Summer 2011 A Publication of the University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Office of Marketing and Communications 26 Alumni News Art Scotland Kathleen Drakulich Eric Barnum Jeff Gorell Sonia Fernandes 50 66 Barry Fadem `79, page 8 Donor Rolls The Last Word Moot Court’s Greatest Season inside back cover Calendar of Events 24 Message from the Alumni Board President Malloy book, page 21 Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 3 Four Alumni Take Their Cases to the High Court and an Electrifying Moment By Michael Heenan Michael Bigelow Harry Colombo Todd Marshall Zackery Morazzini Supre Face-to-Face with the Supreme Court Justices 4 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 H aving one of its graduates argue a case before the Supreme Court of the United States is a point of pride for any law school. It says the school’s graduates succeed at the highest level of the profession in preparation, talent and training. But what does it say when four graduates of a single school argue cases at the nation’s highest court in the same calendar term? pre That’s exactly what happened in the U.S. Supreme Court’s October 2010 calendar. Three cases calendared for argument involved Pacific McGeorge graduates as petitioners or respondents. In one of these cases, both the petitioner and respondent were represented by Pacific McGeorge counsel. It’s an achievement few law schools could claim. And, it makes the Pacific McGeorge community a rich repository of experience and advice for would-be members of the Supreme Court Bar. First on the list of key learnings from McGeorge’s SCOTUS veterans: when you find out you’ve been granted certiorari, get ready to work. “Next to preparing for the State Bar exam after graduating from law school, it was the hardest I’ve worked, ever,” says Todd Marshall, ’91, who represented the California Attorney General seeking a reversal of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Walker v. Martin. “To write the brief took six weeks in a row without a day off. Then, for the reply brief and prepping for the oral argument, it was 50 days in a row,” Marshall says. His opposing counsel on the case, Michael Bigelow, ’75, has no argument with Marshall on this point at least. “When I received notice the case was calendared, I was initially quite excited,” Bigelow says. “Then… I was somewhat catatonic as I realized immediately how much work would be involved.” Harry Colombo received the good news about his case, Harrington v. Richter, just as he began his 20th and final year e with the California Attorney General’s Office. His farewell tour would not be a leisurely one. “It was both thrilling and mentally taxing,” Colombo says now of the experience. When the notice arrived that certiorari had been granted, Colombo was in the midst of teaching three classes at Lincoln Law School. Help from a co-teacher who understood the enormity of the opportunity enabled Colombo to focus exclusively on prepping for his high court appearance. Much of the workload arises from the unique nature of arguing a case at the Supreme Court. First, an enormous quantity of information must be made to fit into a brief with a strict word limit. The process of divining which of the available arguments will secure the approval of at least five justices can be mountainous. Next comes preparation for a 30-minute session of questions unlike any other in the profession. In lower-court presentations, a lawyer is essentially “telling the court what some other court has said and telling it, ‘you have to follow,’” says Marshall. At the Supreme Court, it’s an entirely different strategy and style. “The Supreme Court is basically saying, ‘let’s do something different and new, and the courts will follow us.’ ” Zackery Morazzini, ’99, also of the California AG’s office, saw this in action when his counterpart in Schwarzenegger v. Entertainment Merchants Association took an absolutist position during oral argument. California’s attempt to Robert Best, ’70 Costle v. Pacific Legal Foundation (1980) Respondent Petitioner, 9-0 Nollan v. California Coastal Commission (1987) Appellant Appellant, 5-4 6 P a c i f i c L aw Michael B. Bigelow, ’75 Walker v. Martin (2011) Respondent Petitioner, 9-0 restrict minors’ access to violent video games was simply unconstitutional, the respondent insisted. “The justices aren’t interested in being instructed in what’s constitutional,” Morazzini says. “They took this case in order to make law… I got the sense they were thinking, ‘work with me, we’re here to discuss this.’” Also on the list of things the justices don’t want to hear is a recitation of the written brief. The questions come very quickly into the 30-minute session. In Walker v. Martin, Justice Sotomayor stopped Bigelow after three sentences of his opening statement. His counterpart, Marshall, had managed to get out four before Justice Ginsburg interjected. “They’ve read your brief… they know what you’re going to say,” says Morazzini. “They’re not interested in listening to you make a speech. They’re there to discuss this and to dig into it.” And they’ve done their homework, so attorneys had better do theirs. In Walker, Bigelow found that Justice Ginsburg had read not only the brief, but had thoroughly absorbed some dense, data-rich amicus filings as well. In Schwarzenegger, Morazzini recognized the justices had more than a passing familiarity with the video games in question. Justice Kagan even joked about the court’s younger clerks having spent “considerable amounts of time” playing one of the games discussed. That Supreme Court justices are well-prepared and inquisitive came as no surprise to the Pacific McGeorge foursome who argued in D.C. this term. What did surprise Terrence Cassidy, ’81 Sacramento v. Lewis (1998) Petitioner Petitioner, 9-0 Elk Grove School District v. Newdow (2004) Petitioners Petitioners, 8-0 Anthony T. Caso, ’79 Keller v. State Bar of California (1990) Petitioners Petitioners, 9-0 Victor Haltom, ’91 Fry v. Pliler (2007) Petitioner Respondent, 5-4 Joseph F. Harbison III, ’78 United States v. Rylander (1983) Respondent Petitioners, 8-1 Ronald R. Haven, ’74 Asahi Metal Industry Co. v. Superior Court (1987) Respondent Respondent, 5-4 Summer 2011 each of them, though, was a matter of courtroom design. “You cannot believe how close you are to the justices,” says Morazzini. “When you are making your argument, you are an arm’s length away from the chief justice. If he wanted to, he could reach out and slap you. When the justices are talking, you’re not hearing them through a speaker, you’re hearing their words from their mouths... and they’re staring at you.” Colombo is a veteran of a half-dozen arguments in the California Supreme Court and at least as many in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Even he found the proximity to power a little daunting. “It wasn’t as if I was a neophyte to oral arguments,” he says, “but I have never been in a court where counsel was that close to the court itself for the presentation of oral arguments. That was different.” This discovery made Marshall glad he had come to Washington a week early to sit in on other arguments. “You have to physically turn your body to see Justice Sotomayor on the left or Justice Kagan on the right. You’re so close that your peripheral vision has a hard time picking up the justices seated on the sides.” As intimidating as it may be, the chamber’s layout reinforces the idea that oral arguments are a kind of dialogue. “You forget the courthouse is packed behind you,” Marshall says. “Your attention is focused on the conversation with the justices right in front of you.” M. Reed Hopper, ’87 Rapanos v. United States (2006) Petitioners William Lockyer, ’86 Petitioners, 5-4 Rice v. Collins (2006) Petitioners Petitioners, 9-0 This forced intimacy no doubt raises blood pressure in lawyers regardless of where they were trained. For some Pacific McGeorge graduates, however, there is an extra element to consider. When Justice Kennedy – a longtime faculty member of Pacific McGeorge – interrupted Harry Colombo’s opening statement to ask the first of many questions, Colombo’s thoughts returned briefly to Sacramento. “I was just praying he wasn’t remembering I was the one he tried to fail… to wash out of Constitutional Law in 1979,” said Colombo, who remembers Justice Kennedy as “a brilliant individual and fabulous teacher.” Still, the stress of preparing for and arguing at the Supreme Court seems to be shorter-lived than the pleasant memories associated with it. For Colombo, the lasting memory is of taking the podium with his wife and daughter behind him in the gallery. For Bigelow, it’s the “lopsided grin” on the face of his 9-yearold grandson just as oral arguments began, “a grin full of encouragement and full of pride.” “It’s amazing how the mind selectively remembers and forgets what you go through,” says Marshall. “As time rolls on, I remember the argument, the photo session with my family on the steps afterward… the office accolades following the favorable opinion. I remember those things, but I’m already starting to forget the long hours.” Robert D. Milam, ’75 United States v. California and Cal BOE (1993) Respondents Respondents, 9-0 Todd Marshall, ’91 Walker v. Martin (2011) Petitioner Petitioner, 9-0 Zackery Morazzini, ’99, LL.M. ’02 Schwarzenegger v. Entertainment Merchants Association (2011) Petitioners (decision pending) Joseph Rusconi, ’77 California v. Deep Sea Research (1998) Petitioners Respondent, 9-0 Paul Taggart, ’94 Nevada Dept. of Human Resources v. Hibbs (2003) Petitioners Respondent, 6-3 Stuart Somach,’79 Orff v. United States and Westland W.D. (2005) Respondent Respondent, 9-0 Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 7 They Take The Initiative Pacific McGeorge Alumni Play Critical Roles in Crafting California’s Ballot Measures Barry Fadem, ’79, it was Justice Anthony Kennedy’s constitutional law class at Pacific McGeorge that crystallized their growing interest in political law. Steven Merksamer, ’75, felt Justice Kennedy’s influence in a different way. Growing up in Sacramento, his family and Kennedy’s were close friends, and he absorbed politics and the law by osmosis. All three of these Pacific McGeorge-trained lawyers are now major players in the California initiative process, both on the state and local levels. All got an early start in politics, and all are veteran practitioners in the growing field of political law, a specialty that Fadem says was “invented” by another McGeorge alumnus, Vigo G. (Chip) Nielsen, Jr., ’71, currently a senior partner in the Sacramento-based firm of Nielsen Merksamer Parrinello Gross & Leoni LLP. “Political law is a great field,” says Merksamer. “There’s not a better one to be in. As politics have become more and more regulated, there are more and more opportunities for lawyers.” by Robert T. Wazeka 8 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 Besides their efforts on ballot initiatives, political lawyers also do work on elections and referenda, campaign finance law and reporting, government law, administrative practice, conflicts of interest and ethics. Their clients can be individuals, nonprofit groups, business and trade associations, or political action committees among others. Lance Olson, who spearheaded the creation of the California Political Attorneys Association (CPAA) in 1988 and became its first president, worked for a statewide legislative consulting firm with a focus on the Fair Political Practices Commission while studying at Pacific McGeorge. Right after graduation, Olson started his own law firm, now Hagel & Fishburn LLP, with a specialty in political law. Since 1982, he has been general counsel to the California Democratic Party. “My clients have a strongly developed political sense,” says Olson. “When they come to me, they usually have an idea for an initiative they want passed. One of my jobs is to figure out which Barry Fadem Photography: Gary Laufman For Lance Olson, ’77, and Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw Photography: Steve Yeater Ballot initiatives require that lawyers demonstrate a variety ideas can provoke political attack and how initiatives can be of skills, ranging from the nitty-gritty process of writing and worded to deflect such attacks.” editing the measures themselves to intense negotiations with Before Steve Merksamer attended Pacific McGeorge, he the Attorney General and the Legislative Analyst’s Office worked for then Assembly Speaker Robert Monagan and and the complicated and expensive process of marketing a Lieutenant Governor Ed Reineke. He impressed several mempolitical campaign. bers of Governor Ronald Reagan’s cabinet, including Chief “The single most important things in the initiative of Staff Ed Meese, who advised him to attend law school “to process,” says Olson, “are the ballot initiative’s label, title and avoid becoming a political hack.” At McGeorge, Merksamer summary. By the time we submit these on found a personal mentor in Dean Gordon an initiative, we’ve already done polling to Schaber and solidified his background in test out concepts, hired consultants, and state government by clerking in the Attorhave placed lawyers aboard in anticipation ney General’s office. of legal challenges.” Barry Fadem attended Pacific McLegal action is an indelible part of George at night while working as the first the process, and the lawyers must be executive-director of the Southwest Borable to move quickly. “I’ve had cases,” der Commission under Lieutenant GovOlson says, “in which a lawsuit is filed ernor Mervyn Dymally in the first Jerry in Superior Court, sent to the Court of Brown administration. Fadem’s small, Appeals and then on to the California non-partisan firm, Fadem & Associates, Supreme Court, all within 20 days.” has assisted or managed numerous initiaWhen lawyers run a campaign instead tive campaigns. of simply acting as a consultant, the Fadem’s successes include Proposition process is multi-dimensional. “With each 37 (1984), which established a state lottery, new initiative,” says Merksamer, “we’re 34 percent of whose revenues are set aside doing work that is equivalent to a new for education; and Proposition 20 (2007), start-up business. There’s new subject which established a redistricting commisSteve Merksamer and Lance Olson matter to investigate, a new set of clients sion. His firm has also worked on initiatives to deal with, money to raise. We have to staff the campaign, involving campaign financing, voting rights, recycling, hunger, rent office space, and provide such things as workers’ homeless assistance, housing development and gaming. compensation. We have to get radio and TV coverage. We Olson drafted Proposition 25 (2010), which requires can carry over some methods and materials from previous only a majority vote of the state legislature to pass the state campaigns, but things change, and we have to change with budget instead of the previous two-thirds. He also drafted them.” Proposition 34, which limits the amount individuals can While tens of millions of dollars are often spent on donate to members of the legislature. Prop. 25 passed with running an initiative campaign, the most important item 55.1 percent of the vote and Prop. 34 garnered 60 percent. may be the simple and elemental choice of words. “Ballot Overall, Olson’s firm has been involved in more than 30 measures must be written in accomplished, bullet-proof form ballot measures, split evenly between local and statewide with absolute legal accuracy,” says Fadem, “and they must initiatives. His firm includes four partners and five associates meet the requirements of a political equation that ensures divided equally between political law and litigation work. that they will appeal to voters and that they can pass.” During the last election cycle, Nielsen Merksamer worked Getting a measure passed isn’t easy. Since 1914, when on all but one of the state ballot measures, and that one they the first ballot initiatives were voted upon — one abolishing turned down. “I turn down any ballot measure dealing with a poll tax and the other for a University of California social issues,” Merksamer says, “and I turn down others I construction bond — only 112 of 338 measures, or 33 percent, don’t want to be associated with.” have passed as of January 2010. Merksamer’s firm includes 21 lawyers and a professional “What’s even worse,” says Fadem, “is that wherever you staff of 40. Their work, which focuses on business clients and start in the polls on the favorable side, that is your high-water compliance issues for the private sector, is divided into three mark. It’s only downhill from there.” areas — political law, government law, and litigation. “In a sense, we act as an attorney general’s office for the private sector,” Merksamer says. 9 Stirring Up A Political Firestorm Russo, Meckler Set The Table Nationally For Tea Party T wo political activists based in Northern California have risen to leadership positions in the national Tea Party movement. Although Sal Russo, ’77, and Mark J. Meckler, ’88, followed distinctly different paths to prominence, each earned a law degree from Pacific McGeorge. The Tea Party is the latest chapter in a long record of causes and campaigns for Russo, who was raised in Monterey where his family ran a commercial fishing business. During freshman year at UC Berkeley, he joined a student group working on behalf of Senator Barry Goldwater, the Republican nominee for President in 1964. Russo ultimately left Berkeley to work full-time in conservative politics. Russo met Ronald Reagan when the former actor was preparing to challenge California’s incumbent Governor Edward “Pat” Brown in the 1966 election. Reagan had an aversion to flying after surviving a hazardous, whiteknuckle flight to Catalina Island, Russo recalls. Russo ended up behind the wheel of Reagan’s maroon Lincoln Continental, driving the underdog candidate to fundraisers and rallies all over California. “Reagan didn’t like to talk about politics,” Russo says. “He was an ideas person. That’s what excited him — the power of ideas.” Referring to his own blue-collar origins in Monterey, Russo recalls with a laugh, “My father about had a stroke when he found out I was working for Ronald Reagan.” After Reagan astonished the political pundits with an upset victory over Pat Brown, Russo joined the new administration in Sacramento as an advance man, policy adviser and all-purpose problem solver. A chance conversation with Pacific McGeorge’s dean, the late Gordon Schaber, influenced Russo to earn his J.D. in the evening program while working for Governor Reagan. One of Russo’s professors in the evening program was an occasional visitor to Governor Reagan’s office — Constitutional Law professor and future U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. TEA PARTY By David Graulich 10 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 Russo didn’t practice law after graduating from Pacific McGeorge, but when the Reagan administration ended, he launched his own political consulting firm, now known as Russo Marsh + Rogers. His Sacramento office is decorated with campaign posters and political memorabilia from the U.S. and overseas. Russo’s past clients have included California Governor George Deukmejian (whose administration he also worked in) and two New Yorkers, Senator Alfonse D’Amato and Governor George Pataki. During 2010, Russo became a powerful fundraising and organizational force in the Tea Party as head of the Tea Party Express. “Sal Russo is on a roll,” commented the Los Angeles Times shortly before the election. “Rolling from CNN to NPR, rolling off to Rome for a speech, rolling onto the pages of The Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. The man who’s been a familiar operative in California politics for decades is now a national name.” The Hill, an influential political website, put it more succinctly: “The Tea Party can thank Sal Russo.” Photography: AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli Photography: AP Photo/Steve Yeater, File Mark Meckler speaks to rally-goers during the “United to the Finish” gathering held at the former McClellan Air Force Base site in Sacramento. Russo says that American conservatism has traditionally focused on three disparate themes: social issues, foreign policy and economics. The Tea Party, he says, is focused almost entirely on economic issues, such as taxation, lowering the national debt, and job creation. “To be successful in politics, you have to be in concert with the zeitgeist of the times, and the zeitgeist [today] is opposition to big government and higher taxes,” Russo says. For Meckler, the Tea Party involvement comes after a number of different careers and endeavors. A native of Southern California and a graduate of San Diego State, he came north to study at Pacific McGeorge and was admitted to the California Bar in 1988. After several years of practicing real estate and business law, he moved to Nevada City, where he and his wife operated a popular restaurant, Café Mekka. He also ran a company that manufactured safety equipment for the skiing industry. Meckler’s interest in the power of the Internet for social networking led to his joining the Tea Party movement. He now co-leads a large national organization, the Tea Party Patriots, which has three key policy positions: fiscal responsibility, constitutionally limited government and free markets. “People are tired of a government that seems out of touch,” Meckler told a San Francisco political analyst during the 2010 campaign. “There’s a mentality among government officials that they’re entitled to these seats, they’re entitled to win these elections. It doesn’t matter whether they represent their constituents. They have this sort of permanent status as the political class. [The Tea Party] is just genuine Americans who are revolted by this Sal Russo, the political activist who is the architect of the Tea Party Express, holds up a model of the Tea Party Express bus in his office in Sacramento. concept and have had enough of it.” In a recent NPR interview, Meckler refuted accusations from Democrats that their movement is expanding beyond fiscal conservatism to advocate for conservative social policies. “We don’t address those issues as an organization,” he says. “Because we don’t deal with those issues, I couldn’t comment on them.” Meckler also disagrees with the notion that organizations such as his have caused a schism among conservatives. “There may be different perspectives, but I’m not hearing any divisions when I attend conservative groups’ meetings all over the country,” he says. “In fact, people are talking about how the conservative movement seems to be on the same page more than any other time in history. I think the left hopes for that schism, but I don’t think their hopes will be fulfilled.” Not content with the Tea Party’s successes in the November 2010 election, Meckler led a rally in late March in Washington, D.C., to pressure freshmen Republican congressmen to hold the line and demand more federal budget spending cuts. His group may also target several incumbent Senate Republicans up for reelection in 2012. The GOP has been “granted a temporary shot at showing they can lead [the] country back to fiscal solvency, and we expect them to behave in a way that people want,” he says. Although Russo and Meckler have sparred in the press and are rivals for influence within the Tea Party movement, the two Pacific McGeorge graduates are united on one point: “Ronald Reagan,” they both declare, “would have loved the Tea Party movement.” Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 11 P a c i f i c L aw Photography: Steve Yeater School News 12 Left, Leo Moniz, Kim Bowman Jr., Caitlin Urie Christian, Jill Larrabee, Conness Thompson and Jeremy Ehrlich Moot Court Team Posts Best Season in History Pacific McGeorge completed its most successful moot court season in law school history with a second-place finish in the ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition national championship in April. Kim Bowman, ’11, Jeremy Ehrlich, ’12, and Conness Thompson, ’11, won five straight matches at the prestigious event before suffering a narrow defeat to Duke University in the championship finals. Another Pacific McGeorge team composed of Caitlin Urie Christian, ’11, Jill Larrabee, ’12, and Leo Moniz, ’12, received the best brief award. The national competition began with 207 teams, and Pacific McGeorge was the only California law school to make it to Chicago as Summer 2011 the teams swept through an earlier San Francisco regional. Another Pacific McGeorge team won the Bernard E. Witkin Award for Excellence in Appellate Advocacy in the Roger J. Traynor California Appellate Moot Court competition. Brandon Esraelian, ’11, Corrie Erickson, ’11, and Brad Coutinho, ’12, were rewarded for their overall performance after taking second place in both the best oral argument rankings and the best brief ratings among state competitors. Other Pacific McGeorge results during the season included: second place in the North American regional of the International Criminal Court competition and a trip to the championship finals in The Hague, Netherlands; second place in the Saul Lefkowitz Intellectual Property Moot regional; second place in the Thomas Tang International Moot Court regional and a trip to the national finals; third place in the Niagara International Moot Court event; and a best brief award in the National Entertainment Law Moot Court Competition. “The Pacific McGeorge Moot Court program can now claim to be No. 1 in California and No. 2 in the nation this year,” said Professor Ed Telfeyan, ’75, who teaches the Advanced Appellate Advocacy course in which all of the team members are enrolled. “I cannot say enough about these students, except to point out the obvious, which is that they have brought great credit to Pacific McGeorge.” Photography: Steve Yeater Kennedy On Campus To ‘Paint the Law’ Justice Kennedy explains the significance of Edouard Manet’s “The Railway” during his lecture. in the law through their power of language and thought included John Marshall, John Marshall Harlan, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Benjamin Cardoza, William O. Douglas and Hugo Black. Justice Kennedy, a member of the faculty since 1965, will teach again in Pacific McGeorge’s Summer Salzburg Program this July in Austria. off back in January 2010. Bleeding heavily, she picked up the piece of finger and rode with her husband to the emergency room. The ER doctor said there was no way he could reattach it and an orthopedic surgeon suggested a small amputation to make it heal better. But an Internet search the next day led her to a University of Pittsburgh physician who helped pioneer a new procedure called tissue regeneration. So began a journey to a new fingertip that looks just as good as the old. “Just by looking at it, you can’t tell it was ever severed,” says Kulkarni. “I’m doing everything I could do before.” Kulkarni, who did her undergraduate work in India and has a Master’s Photography: Steve Yeater US Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy visited the campus in September and delivered an hour-long lecture on “Painting the Law” that filled the lecture hall with students, faculty and community leaders. Kennedy, in Sacramento to participate in the monthlong celebration leading up to the re-opening of the new Crocker Art Museum, drew insightful comparisons between the history of art and the history of American law. “There are parallels between the great artists and the great jurists,” he said. “Artists and attorneys draw upon the past as they build new frontiers. They seek to make order out of a world in disorder. The timelines are not parallel, but the breakthroughs in each venue are stunning.” Armed with a PowerPoint presentation that featured great works of art and excerpts from famous Supreme Court opinions and dissents, Kennedy commanded the full attention of his audience with his deep knowledge of both subjects. Among the innovative artists he cited were Michelangelo, Rembrandt, Edouard Manet, PierreAuguste Renoir, Vincent Van Gogh and Edward Hopper. Jurists he credited with making advancements Student Becomes Subject Of Major Medical Story Second-year student Deepa Kulkarni, ’12, was the subject of a CNN national news story last fall about the successful regeneration of her fingertip following a household accident. Kulkarni lost the threequarters inch tip of her right pinky finger when a slamming door chopped it Deepa Kulkarni’s pinky finger looks as good as new. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 13 Sprankling, Carter Win University Awards Two popular members of the Pacific McGeorge faculty, Professor John Sprankling and Professor Linda Carter, were chosen for prestigious awards by the University of the Pacific this spring. Sprankling received the Eberhardt Teacher-Scholar Award that annually recognizes a faculty member from the entire University 14 P a c i f i c L aw Photography: Lori Hall in Labor & Industrial Relations from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, worked in the human resources field for many years before coming to Pacific McGeorge. “A few of my fellow students and I started the student group — the McGeorge Employment and Labor Law Society,” she says. “I hope to work in the employment and labor law field when I graduate.” And, of course, she has a renewed interest in the medical field. In March 2011, Kulkarni was invited to speak at a national conference of business CEOs, scientists, doctors, and stem cell researchers in Salt Lake City. “My main goal behind speaking at the event was to promote education of patients and doctors on contemporary medicine,” she says. “There are so many new FDA-approved medical treatment options. It’s kind of sad that more people don’t know about them.” Left, University President Pamela Eibeck, Provost Maria Pallavicini, Linda Carter and John Sprankling who fulfills the highest aspirations of scholarship and service to students, colleagues, the profession and the community. Only three other Pacific McGeorge professors, Brian Landsberg, John Myers and Carter, have been so honored in the past two decades. Sprankling, an authority on property law, has had his scholarly articles published in major law journals across the country. Carter received the Podesto Award, which recognizes outstanding educators at all three campuses who directly touch and enrich the lives of Pacific students. Previous recipients of the award include Associate Dean Julie Davies, Professor Thom Main and Professor Ed Telfeyan. Carter is the director of the law school’s Legal Infrastructure and International Justice Institute and chair of the International Summer 2011 Studies Committee. In those roles, she has sought to expand post-graduate opportunities for our law students worldwide. Symposia Highlight Busy Spring Semester The Pacific McGeorge campus was buzzing with activities this spring, including three major conferences. In March, a two-day human rights symposium played to a packed house in the law school’s international building, Northwest Hall. The conference, which addressed the impact and implementation of human rights norms in substantive areas of law, featured prominent legal experts in the field from around the globe. “Without a doubt, this symposium was the finest we have yet presented — an imaginative look at the intersection of human rights law and other areas of international law that brought an impressive group of scholars together with our faculty,” says Dean Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker. In April, a Capital Center for Public Law & Policy symposium took an indepth look at the dramatic changes taking place in the delivery of legal practice worldwide. “Ethics 20/20 — Globalization, Technology and Transforming the Law,” brought together leading scholars on the subject and practitioners riding the legal profession’s futuristic wave. Later that month, the McGeorge Law Review organized a conference, “The Road to Legitimizing Marijuana: What Benefit at What Cost,” which attracted a large audience of attorneys to campus. The public forum looked at the deep conflicts between federal and state laws on medical marijuana, illegal drug trafficking and the impact on the criminal justice system if the drug is legalized. Photography: Steve Yeater Rugby Club Scores with New Room in Legal Studies Center By Michael Curran T he McGeorge Alumni Rugby Football Club became the first organization to put its name on a room in the new Legal Studies Center that houses the Gordon D. Schaber, Law Library raising a significant amount of money to stake its claim to a corner of the stacks section. “It was an impressive fundraising accomplishment,” says Dori Dennis Moorehead, ’94, the Pacific McGeorge director of major gifts, who along with Dean Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker hosted the group’s members at a dedication reception this spring. “The Nevada alumni are close to their fundraising goal, and their room will be ready this fall. We hope their generosity and that of the rugby club will inspire other alumni chapters to name a room or table that will be used by future generations of McGeorge students.” The Pacific McGeorge rugby alums, better known as the McDucks, descended on the campus the second weekend of April to toast their new club headquarters. Numerous California attorneys representing California cities from San Diego to Marysville were present, in addition to club members who trekked in from Florida, Louisiana, Nevada, New York and Texas. “I made my best friends here when I was a student,” says attorney Anthony McClaren, ’03, who keeps track of former players and organized the fundraising drive. “Many of my teammates and guys who played before me make it back here to Sacramento every spring to renew old friendships and play in the student/alumni game.” A story told by Tom Lininger, ’89, a Fair Oaks attorney and the managing partner of an independent league baseball team, reflects the rugby club’s camaraderie and spirit. “The relationships I built while playing with the Pacific McGeorge Rugby Club helped me transition to life on the West Coast, and those relationships endure in my 25th year living in Sacramento,” says Lininger, who came to Pacific McGeorge and Sacramento, sight unseen, from Kent State University in Ohio. “I walked onto campus for first-year orientation in August 1986,” Lininger says. “I saw the rugby club table (I had played at Kent and thought I would not play again) and chatted with the two guys at the table. I decided to go out to play with the club. Being from so far away, the teammates became my surrogate family. I spent most holidays with the families of someone on the rugby team. One of the guys at that orientation table, Joe Weinberger, was one of the first people I saw at the room dedication.” Weinberger, ’88, is a well-known Folsom personal injury attorney. “Rugby was the single most important part of law school to me,” says Chris Sullivan, ’97, who runs a highly successful law firm and real estate office in Las Vegas and co-chaired the room fundraising effort with McClaren. “I do business with the guys that were in law school with me. It’s a great networking group. I just had an email from a guy who couldn’t make it up to Sacramento, and he was looking to refer a case to another McGeorge attorney.” The Pacific McGeorge Rugby Football Club is one of Pacific McGeorge’s oldest student organizations. Officially founded in 1981, the club has been active every year since. The students play weekend tournaments in the fall and a Saturday league schedule in the spring. Opponents range from the Stanford Graduate Rugby Club to the Reno Zephyrs. The team used to practice at McClatchy Park and play its home games at Curtis Park. Nowadays, the team practices at the latter field and plays at Danny Dunn Park off of Power Inn Road. Members of this year’s McGeorge Rugby Club are appreciative of the alumni club’s support and friendship. “The students always get a big kick out of alumni weekend. In addition to the game, we do a variety of activities with the alums,” says Garrett Civian, ’11. “This year, we had the opening ceremony for the rugby room, a pre-game social, the game itself, and a post-match barbecue.” The McGeorge Rugby Room, which the alumni team decorated to resemble a pub, features rugby memorabilia, numerous framed and signed photographs and a reclining leather lounge chair. It is open to all students and alums. Just ask for the rugby key at the front desk if you want to see a piece of Pacific McGeorge history — and to see a highly unusual study space. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 15 Augmenting Experiential Learning Programs Pacific McGeorge Pouring More Resources Into Skills Courses By Joanna Corman P 16 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 shows students what an employment lawyer does. Professor Jeffrey Proske is teaching Business Transactions: The Art of the Deal for students who want to practice transactional law. Proske says he developed the class because he felt law school didn’t equip him with the basic skills required of a transactional attorney. Skills-based learning instills confidence in students, Proske says. “By providing an experiential course for them, we can provide simulated real-life exercises so they’re not surprised and taken unawares when they get out into the real practice world and are confronted with very similar types of challenges.” The externship program also has been undergoing changes. Over the past seven years, the number of students doing externships has increased from 100 a year to more than 300, says Robert A. Parker, who works in the field placement program. Full-time judicial externships recently have expanded to allow students to consider courts outside California. During the next academic year, students will be able to work a full semester abroad for credit, the first time Pacific McGeorge has offered such a program. Several factors have influenced Pacific McGeorge’s renewed emphasis on experiential learning. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching issued a study in 2007 examining how well U.S. and Canadian law schools are preparing their students to practice law. The study found that schools excel at teaching legal analysis but lagged in teaching practical skills and the profession’s ethical values. The study was generally embraced at Pacific McGeorge. “Most of us here were very supportive of the findings and also felt that while we could do more, we were on the right track,” Moylan says. Photography: Steve Yeater acific McGeorge has always focused on producing practice-ready attorneys, but in the past few years it has increased its efforts to do so. The school is expanding offerings to give students more opportunities to learn the skills necessary to practice law after graduation. “Students learn best when they’re doing rather than being talked to,” says Professor Mary-Beth Moylan, director of Global Lawyering Skills, a revamped set of skills-based classes unveiled in the 20092010 academic year. The two-year program, required of firstand second-year law students, replaces Legal Process and Appellate and International Advocacy. Among other changes, the new program teaches a broader array of practical skills than the classes it replaced. New offerings include client counseling, mediation and settlement negotiation. Pacific McGeorge also has expanded its legal clinic program. Mary-Beth Moylan and Stephanie Thompson The school added three clinics, bringing its total to nine. The new programs allow students to represent misdemeanor clients in federal court, or work in an appellate advocacy clinic or a mediation clinic. Most students also are required to take a podium class, which explores the area of law they are practicing in the clinic. “It’s where legal theory meets legal practice,” says Dorothy Landsberg, director of Clinical Studies. “The more background and understanding you have in the applicable substantive law, the better job you can do in representing your client.” Pacific McGeorge is offering two new advanced practical skills courses this academic year. Professor Stephanie Thompson, assistant director of Global Lawyering Skills, is teaching a course she developed, California Employment Law Practicum. Through hands-on exercises, the elective The school also was moved to increase its experiential learning offerings at the recommendation of an outside consultant who assessed the school’s required first-year legal writing course around the same time of the Carnegie Report’s release. The recession also has made it even more imperative for Pacific McGeorge to teach its students the nuts and bolts of practicing law. Law firms and government agencies are hiring fewer attorneys out of law school, forcing some students to start their own firms as soon as they pass the bar. In addition, law firms historically trained first-year associates, but training has become an expense they are less willing to accommodate. Learning skills in law school that used to be taught on the job give students an advantage over their competition, something third-year student Scott Radcliffe knows first-hand. Radcliffe had about a half-dozen jobs in law school, including a summer position at a Walnut Creek civil litigation firm, which will hire him after graduation. He calls Global Lawyering Skills II the “most important class” he’s had. “Everything that I do when I go out to those jobs is all built upon the things that I learned in GLS.” Summer Conference Will Will ‘Looping’ Give Law Students More Confidence? Examine Evolution Of Legal Writing Programs By Joanna Corman G The Association of Legal Writing Directors will hold its biennial lobal Lawyering Skills Director Mary-Beth Moylan and Assistant Director Stephanie Thompson are experimenting with the best way to structure the two-year foundational program. They hypothesize that students who learn from the same professor both years will learn more and have a better law school experience than those who switch professors. When the GLS program started in the 2009 academic year, the pair divided students into three groups: one staying with their professor both years, one choosing their professor, and one required to change professors. The expectation, Moylan and Thompson write in a 2010 article in Duquesne Law Review, is that “looping” students through the GLS program – staying with the same professor in the second year – will create more “hopeful” students. “Law school is very difficult, and I think students, especially after their first year, get very discouraged,” Thompson says. While the professors acknowledge drawbacks to looping, they say the benefits include saving professors and students valuable teaching time in getting to know each other. “Our theory is that by making a personal connection with a professor who you are with for two years, that gives students a sense that there are people who are resources for them; there are people who are there to help them to succeed,” Moylan says. While Moylan and Thompson will study two full groups before making a decision, early results point favorably toward looping. They also plan to use grades, extracurricular activities and other information to see if students who looped did better academically or got more involved than their nonlooping counterparts. Emily Zimmerman, associate professor of law at the Earle Mack School of Law at Drexel University, studies students’ perspectives in their law school education. She says there are few examples of empirical research examining students’ preferences about their law school education. The study’s value is finding out how students feel about keeping the same professor regardless of the outcome, she says. “I think it’s important for students to know that there is a rationale for what the law school is doing,” she says. “Even if it’s not the students’ first choice, the student might at least understand the value in what the law school is doing.” conference at Pacific McGeorge from June 23 to 25, 2011. About half of the organization’s 250 members are expected to attend the three-day gathering, titled “Leadership for the Second Wave.” Pacific McGeorge was chosen as the conference’s location in part because the work it is doing in teaching practical skills matches the organization’s goals, says Mary Algero, president of the organization and the Warren E. Mouledoux Distinguished Professor of Law, Loyola University New Orleans College of Law. The conference will examine how the role of directors of legal writing programs has changed since starting in the late 1970s and early 1980s. As the program’s original leaders have moved on over the past decade, newer directors have expanded the types of practical skills taught beyond legal writing, says Mary-Beth Moylan, director of Pacific McGeorge’s Global Lawyering Skills program, who is helping to organize the conference. The conference will examine the strengths and weaknesses of different leadership models. It will explore the leadership roles directors of legal writing programs can take in their programs, at their institutions and in the community. It also will look at how law schools are expanding practical skills beyond legal writing. There will be two plenary sessions: one featuring California Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani CantilSakauye, the other reporting on changes in law school accreditation being considered by the American Bar Association. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 17 P a c i f i c L aw Photography: Steve Yeater Faculty News 18 Professor Larry Levine recalls some of his early days at Pacific McGeorge as Dean Parker looks on. Levine Celebrates 25 Years at McGeorge Professor Larry Levine, one of our most popular faculty members, celebrated his 25th anniversary in legal academia in style as more than 280 colleagues, former students and friends gathered for a celebration on campus. The February event also raised $75,000 for the Jeffrey K. Poilé LGBT Civil Rights Memorial Scholarship, which has grown into one of the largest endowed student scholarships at the law school. Kate Kendall, the executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights, was the keynote speaker at the event that featured numerous tributes to the honoree. Summer 2011 Levine was an associate at Morrison & Foerster in San Francisco before joining the Pacific McGeorge faculty in the fall of 1985. He taught a first-year Section C class and many of those former students, including Judge Kristi Culver Kapetan, ’88, returned to honor him at the standing-room-only reception at the Gary V. Schaber Student Center. “I loved teaching law from my first day in the classroom,” Levine says. “What a memorable section I had my first year, and my subsequent sections haven’t been too shabby either. It’s gratifying how many of my students have become dear friends.” Poilé, a gifted internationalist who was fluent in French and Arabic, died in 1992 at the age of 36 from AIDS. Levine’s commitment to his life partner and equal dedication to civil rights inspired him to create the Poilé Scholarship in 2002. To date, $330,000 has been raised benefiting 45 deserving students. Yelpaala Urges Africans To Seek Local Solutions Professor Kojo Yelpaala spoke on “The Impact of Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights and the Biodiversity Convention on Human Health and Food Security,” to a large audience of students, faculty and government officials in February at the University organizations that apparently have aggravated the risk to human health and food security posed by debilitating diseases. Calvert Back To Teach At Legal Alma Mater Clay Calvert, ’91, the Brechner Eminent Scholar in Mass Communication at the University of Florida, is teaching Constitutional Law at his legal alma mater this spring as a visiting professor. In February, the Pacific McGeorge alumnus got to lecture some of his old professors as he delivered a talk on “Newsworthiness and the Privacy of Death” as part of the law school’s faculty colloquium series. Calvert, who has a Ph.D. in communication from Stanford University, is a nationally known scholar. Prior to joining the Florida faculty, he taught at Pennsylvania State University where he co-directed the Pennsylvania Center for the First Amendment. He has written several books dealing with that topic, most notably Voyeur Nation — the first scholarly book to examine the 21st century phenomena of reality TV shows. Calvert’s latest research and writing focuses on the expansion of privacy rights to the family members of a deceased person. Several courts and state legislatures have extended familial rights controlling access to, and use of, death-scene pictures even in the case of public figures. “Especially in the age of the Internet, there is a collision between First Amendment rights and the potential for emotional distress of surviving family members,” Calvert says. “We have seen legislative responses that carve out exemptions from the Freedom of Information Act and state open-records laws. These affect tort laws and expand tort remedies.” Calvert believes the media is making a mistake in pressing First Amendment rights in every case that comes down the road. “The news media needs to pick its battles and choose cases where there is an actual public need to know,” he says. “It’s far too easy to trot out ‘the public’s right to know’ each time, and some of that right to know is being eroded by their unpopular actions.” Paton Appointed to ABA Commission Professor Paul Paton, director of Pacific McGeorge’s Ethics Across the Professions Initiative, has been selected as reporter to the American Bar Association’s Ethics 20/20 Commission. His appointment was announced during the ABA Midyear Meeting in February in Atlanta. The Ethics 20/20 Commission was appointed by then-President Carolyn Photography: John Blaustein of Ghana in Accra, Ghana. Yelpaala, an international business expert who has been a member of the Pacific McGeorge faculty for 30 years, urged African leaders to establish a common research center to facilitate a biodiversity convention on human health and security. He said the establishment of such a center would allow that organization to train more researchers who could contribute to the development of Africa. Calling on African leaders to put away political affiliations and focus on issues that would emancipate the continent from foreign dependency, he said, “This would help curb the huge sums of money invested in foreign institutions to solve African problems. Africa must avoid overdependence on developed countries and find solutions to its own problems. It has the collective brainpower to conduct important research on many diseases adversely affecting the progress of Africans.” Yelpaala’s appearance was sponsored by the Legon International Scholar Series of University of Ghana. Yelpaala, who holds a law degree from the university, has long conducted research and written on issues confronting Africa and how they can be tackled. He has been particularly critical of several agreements reached by international Professor Paul Paton Lamm in August 2009 to “perform a thorough review of the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the U.S. system of lawyer regulation in the context of advances in technology and global legal practice.” The commission, which will propose major policy recommendations that could affect lawyers and clients well into the future, has received national and international recognition for its work. Paton has designated responsibility for the commission’s working groups on Alternative Business Structures and Entity Regulation, but will also be directly involved in other areas, including choice of law in cross-border practice, and the implications of working with new technologies. Together with subcommittee chairs, commission counsel and the chief reporter, he will assist in further developing policy proposals, research materials and background papers, as well as synthesizing submissions from commission hearings. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 19 Professor Cary Bricker’s teaching style has drawn national attention. The commission is charged with making comprehensive recommendations in time for final deliberation by the House of Delegates at the 2012 ABA Annual Meeting. Paton is recognized internationally for his expertise on lawyer regulation, ethics for corporate counsel, and multidisciplinary practice issues. His article, “Cooperation, CoOption or Coercion? The FATF Lawyer Guidance and Regulation of the Legal Profession,” which focused on the impact of international anti-moneylaundering and anti-terrorist financing agreements on lawyer regulation, was selected for presentation at the 2010 American Association of Law Schools Annual Conference and 20 P a c i f i c L aw was published in the 2010 Journal of the Professional Lawyer. In addition to his activities in the United States, Paton is serving a second term as chair of the Canadian Bar Association’s National Ethics and Professional Responsibility Committee. Bricker Considered for Best Law Teachers Book Professor Cary Bricker has made the next-to-last cut for inclusion in an upcoming book, What the Best Law Teachers Do, which will be published by Harvard University Press in 2012. Bricker is one of 28 teachers chosen as finalists from more than 300 nominations received by co-authors Gerry Hess (Gonzaga), Michael Summer 2011 Schwartz (Washburn) and Sophie Sparrow (Franklin Pierce) who are collaborating on the project. The authors expect to include almost all of the finalists in the book. “I was surprised and delighted to be contacted by one of the authors,” says Bricker, who teaches Trial Advocacy and Advanced Trial Advocacy at Pacific McGeorge while also overseeing the Federal Defender Clinic. “They plan to come to campus, observe one or two of my classes and talk to my students and faculty colleagues.” Bricker has been one of the most popular professors on campus since joining the faculty five years ago. In 2006, she was voted Professor of the Year by the Professor Amy Landers Landers’ Article Wins Samsung-Stanford Prize Professor Amy Landers’ paper, “Theorizing Patentee Injury: Apportioning Claims for Reasonable Royalty Compensation,” won a $10,000 award in the inaugural SamsungStanford Patent Prizes competition. Landers’ work was one of nine pieces chosen from law professor submissions nationally for the firstplace prize, which also included an invitation to a conference on the subject of patent remedies in February at Stanford Law School. Photography: Steve Yeater Day and Evening Divisions. Bricker came to Sacramento from the Temple University School of Law in Philadelphia, where she was director of the highest-rated Trial Advocacy program in the country. Thanks to the efforts of Professors Jay Leach, Joe Taylor and Bricker, Pacific McGeorge’s outstanding Trial Advocacy program was rated No. 5 in the country last year by U.S. News & World Report Best Graduate Schools magazine. U.K. Supreme Court Adopts Sprankling Thesis State and federal appellate courts often cite the scholarship of Pacific McGeorge faculty in their decisions. There is even the occasional reference to faculty articles and books in decisions by the Supreme Court of the United States. But it is unusual for a major foreign court to use three paragraphs of a law review article in an important decision. That’s what occurred in the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom’s recent decision in Star Energy Weald Basin Limited v. Bocardo SA [2010] UKSC 35. Professor John Sprankling’s article, permission, but it does limit any damages to a nominal sum. British courts had previously set a potential award structure that entitled a landowner to 9 percent of income generated by an oil reservoir. Malloy Melts Away Professor John Sprankling Financial Crisis Fog Owning the Center of the Earth, 55 UCLA L. Rev. 979 (2008), which attacked the conventional wisdom that a landowner holds title to everything between the land surface and the center of the earth, was heavily quoted in the ruling. The UK Supreme Court agreed with Sprankling’s thesis, observing that “the simple notion that each landowner is the proprietor of a column or cylinder of land that stretches down to the centre of the earth and upwards infinitely is plainly no longer tenable... As Sprankling explains... productive human activity is possible only within the shallowest portion of the earth’s crust and humans have never penetrated below it.” England’s high court upheld an appellate ruling that left a landowner with a minimal award of damages after an oil company “trespassed on his land” while carrying out horizontal drilling. The decision does not stop landowners from applying for an injunction to prevent drilling without A new book by Distinguished Professor and Scholar Michael Malloy, one of the foremost authorities on banking regulation, gives an insider’s view of a crisis that nearly shattered the American financial system and continues to reverberate around the world. Anatomy of a Meltdown from Aspen Publishers details the downfall of two well-known American corporations, investment giant Lehman Brothers and WaMu, the holding company for the Washington Mutual Bank. Malloy makes the case that both firms stumbled largely as a result of their connections with the subprime mortgage markets, though from opposite ends — WaMu in origination of mortgages and Lehman Brothers in investment in and distribution of derivative products. Both firms went belly-up in September 2008, rocking world financial markets in the process. The collapse of Lehman Brothers was the largest bankruptcy in American history. WaMu’s bankruptcy a week later represented the largest bank failure in U.S. history. “The book tells that story and draws conclusions about the steps necessary to pull the financial system out of the current crisis — and to avoid the next one,” Malloy says. “Since the Dodd-Frank Act signed last year does not respond adequately or completely to the crisis, I think we’re going to be talking about the issues raised in this book for some time.” Malloy, a former SEC enforcer who has taught at Pacific McGeorge since 1996, has written or edited more than 100 books and book-length supplements in banking, corporate securities regulation and other areas of the law. Anatomy of a Meltdown, a 304page paperback, is available from Aspen and numerous on line book sellers. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw Photography: John Blaustein “The paper is about patent damages — essentially, that when awarding damages the fact finder should tailor compensation to the patentee’s actual contribution to the field, rather than the patent claim as a whole,” Landers says. “[The claim as a whole] can include pre-existing technology in addition to the ‘new’ piece or pieces added by the inventor.” Landers is the director of the Intellectual Property Law Concentration at Pacific McGeorge. Samsung is a multinational conglomerate headquartered in Seoul, South Korea. It owns Samsung Electronics, the largest technology company in the world. 21 Professor of Law B.A., University of Pennsylvania J.D., Stanford University Courses Taught Evidence, Criminal Procedure, Criminal Law, Sentencing and Post-Conviction Remedies Public Sector Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. Federal Defender’s Office Los Angeles Staff Attorney U.S. Ninth Circuit San Francisco Recent Scholarship “A Case for a Constitutional Right to Counsel in Habeas Corpus Law,” Hastings L.J. 541 (2009) Photography: John Blaustein 22 Professor Emily Garcia Uhrig Sense and Sensibility Aren’t Opposites in the Law the pacific mcgeorge profile By Joanna Corman P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 I “If the government can’t prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in the face of a zealous defense, then it shouldn’t be taking your liberty away,” she says. “That makes me sleep better at night, knowing that this is the society that we live in.” Garcia Uhrig remembers her first client, a man covered in prison tattoos who had served time for a bank robbery conviction and was indicted on an identical charge. He looked imposing but Garcia Uhrig found otherwise. “He was one of the sweetest clients that I had.” He spent his childhood watching his mother shoot heroin and his adolescence in the California Youth Authority. He lived with his grandparents, who were getting evicted because they couldn’t afford their rent. On the day of the robbery, he rode his bike to a bank and handed the clerk a note. He pled guilty and Garcia Uhrig argued, in essence, that no one had ever given the man the benefit of the doubt. The judge sentenced him at the low end of the guidelines. It was a defining moment for her client, who told her that her argument made him realize for the first time the impact his upbringing had on him. It also was a profound moment for Garcia Uhrig, who realized that she could help her clients gain insight into their lives and what she hoped would be the first step in their making changes. After nearly five years in the Federal Defender’s Office working on trial and appellate cases, Garcia Uhrig moved to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco. There, she became an expert on habeas corpus, “the last step in litigation for inmates who have lost their liberty and who seek to challenge the legality of their detention, whether it’s the length of their sentence or their actual conviction,” Garcia Uhrig says. Habeas is meant to fix violations of constitutional rights that happen at trial or on appeal. In the mid-1990s, Congress passed legislation that makes it so complicated, Garcia Uhrig says, it has become impossible for almost anyone to use it. Most of her academic writing focuses on habeas. “Part of what I’m trying to do as an academic is to bring some clarity to some of the problems in the statute. My dream would be to see the statute repealed because it’s so unfair.” Photography: Steve Yeater It was an important lesson, especially for an attorney at the start of her career. Emily Garcia Uhrig was clerking for Judge Harry Pregerson in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Los Angeles. Before working for Pregerson, Garcia Uhrig thought being a lawyer meant you’re “either intellectually brilliant or you’re a bleeding heart. He was the first person I met who showed me that those are not mutually exclusive things; that you can be an intellectually brilliant person and also use your brilliance in a compassionate way,” she says. Garcia Uhrig has infused that lesson into an unusual career path that led her to Pacific McGeorge in 2006. She is now an associate professor who teaches courses on evidence, criminal law, sentencing and post-conviction remedies, and criminal procedure. Garcia Uhrig emphasizes in her classes why laws come about and what they’re seeking to redress. She wants her students to understand the rationale behind the public policy that helped form the law, the complexity of the law, and that there is not always a right answer. “That’s what will make them able to identify a new issue and to break new ground legally. To participate in the perpetual evolution in the rule of law Professor Emily Garcia Uhrig in class [becomes possible] if they understand the law on that level.” After graduating from Stanford Law School, Garcia Uhrig worked a year at Hogan & Hartson, LLP, a large civil firm in Washington, D.C., before clerking for Judge Pregerson. She returned to the Hogan firm but left again in 1995 to join the Office of Legal Counsel for the U.S. Department of Justice, where she worked on many issues pertaining to criminal procedure. Most people leave the practice for academia, but Garcia Uhrig chose to work in the trenches. In 1997, she became a deputy federal public defender in Los Angeles, working with many clients who were charged with serious crimes. It was one of the most satisfying jobs she’s had. It wasn’t hard to defend people who were guilty for two reasons, Garcia Uhrig says. First, she [recognizes that people] tend to commit crimes when they don’t get the mental health treatment, social support, parenting or other help they need. Second, most of the work involves sentencing. Most clients plead guilty to avoid a trial and what’s left to decide is punishment. This is the fifteenth in a series of articles on Pacific McGeorge faculty members who pursue excellence inside and outside the classroom. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 23 Message from The Alumni Board President Greetings Fellow Alumni & Friends, First and foremost, I am very honored to represent the Pacific McGeorge Alumni Board of Directors and to have the opportunity to fill you in on the exciting things Pacific McGeorge and its Alumni Board have underway. Legal Studies Center By now you have likely heard about the $10 million Legal Studies Center renovation project. The renovations will house the Gordon D. Schaber Law Library and include increased space for research and study, conferences and symposiums. Last year, under the stewardship of Past President Jim Day, the Alumni Board raised more than $100,000 toward the Alumni Board Courtyard to honor Alumni Boards past and present. This year, Alumni Board Vice President for Development Scott Hervey has challenged the Alumni Board to contact friends, family and classmates to encourage them to make a naming gift. For the first time in Pacific McGeorge’s history there is a wide range of naming opportunities, at different price points, available in the new Legal Studies Center. I am sure that all of you, like me, spent countless hours in the Reading Room, the carrels, and the stacks. And along the way, I am sure you made friendships; a few of you may have found your spouses, learned a few things, and forged a new career. In recognition of that memorable time, I would like to ask you to consider a naming opportunity – perhaps a chair ($500) in memory of all the hours you sat, or, if you are so inclined, the entire first floor library stacks ($1,000,000). For more information, please contact the Development Office at 916.739.7300. 24 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 Alumni Board Activities This year’s 36 Alumni Board members have started out with a bang, already implementing goals adopted at the February Alumni Board Retreat. The Alumni Board goals are available online at: mcgeorge.edu. By way of example, the Alumni Board is currently working on: •Improving Pacific McGeorge’s U.S. News & World Report law school rankings. McGeorge was again ranked in the Top 100, but we can do better! Assistant Dean Tim Naccarato met with the Alumni Board in April and briefed them on the methodology behind the rankings. The Alumni Board will be digesting that information in order to develop and implement methods to improve. •Creating strong regional alumni chapter committees to provide more opportunities for our alumni to visit with classmates, network, and grow professionally. •Increasing Pacific McGeorge’s presence in the social media world. Pacific McGeorge currently utilizes Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, and the CDO has a blog (mcgeorgecdo.com). Fortunately, Pacific McGeorge already recognized the importance of a presence in the social media world and has contracted to have that prosence evaluated and our website redesigned. The Alumni Board met with the paid consultant, and discussed ideas and areas of improvement. •Appreciating the environment. The Alumni Board has requested of Pacific McGeorge that all meeting materials be available electronically, and any printed meeting materials be recycled when possible. Class Reunions As a of 2001 graduate, I am excited about our upcoming class reunion on October 15, 2011. Pacific McGeorge will be hosting a lunch, CLE program, individual class photo, campus tour, and reception for the 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, and 2006 classes. I will be there and hope to see the classes well represented. I appreciate the honor of serving as your president and truly am eager to hear any ideas or input you may have to offer. You can reach me at 916.739.7141 if you have any comments, questions, or would like to become more involved in the Pacific McGeorge Alumni community. Shanti Halter ’01 2011 Alumni Board of Directors Executive Committee Shanti Halter ’01 President Scott M. Hervey ’95 Vice President of Development Erin M. Dunston ’99 Vice President of Planning Nirav Desai ’04 Vice President of Alumni Programs James M. Day, Jr. ’73 Immediate Past President Directors Ric Asfar ’06 Eric L. Barnum ’94 Dionne Choyce ’01 Hector deAvila Gonzalez LL.M. ’03 Kathryn M. Davis ’99 Larry K. Dunn ’84 By Michael Curran The McGeorge Alumni Association’s new president, Shanti Halter, ’01, is used to being center stage. She was the “Second Lady of Arkansas” when her husband, Bill Halter, served as the 14th Lieutenant Governor of that state from 2007 to January of this year. The new board leader has been very active in civic and charitable organizations since graduating from law school. Her latest service comes as a member on the board of trustees of Home Instruction for Parents of Preschool Youngsters USA, a parent involvement, school readiness program that helps parents prepare their 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children for success in school and beyond. After graduating from Pacific McGeorge with a Certificate in Governmental Affairs, Shanti Halter worked for Herum Crabtree in Stockton, California. Shortly thereafter, she moved to Washington, D.C., where she was an advocate for the National Council of State Housing Agencies. She finished her time in the nation’s capital as an associate with Marzulla & Marzulla, focusing on property, environmental, and California water law issues. Halter still practices law telecommuting for a California-based law firm from her North Little Rock, Arkansas, home. She gets out to California for alumni board meetings and many of the other key events that the organization sponsors. Halter succeeds veteran Sacramento attorney Jim Day in the president’s chair. Under Day’s two-year leadership, the board greatly expanded its alumni outreach and put added emphasis on the mentoring and networking relationship of graduates to current students. Halter plans to continue those efforts and encourage more alumni to become involved with their legal alma mater. Photography: Steve Yeater Kimberly K. Delfino ’93 Halter Goes from Second Lady of Arkansas to First Lady of the McGeorge Alumni Association Rex Frazier ’00 Brian K. Harris ’00 Daniel L. Hitzke ’00 Dustin Johnson ’04 Kim Kakavas ’08 Debra J. Kazanjian ’79 Gayle J. Lau ’74 Robert C. MacKichan ’76 Gustavo Matheus ’96 John R. Masterman ’78 Megan Moore ’08 Dennis J. Olmstead ’84 Diana K. Rodgers ’94 Jennifer A. Scott ’99 Evan D. Smiley ’92 Morgan C. Smith ’93 Dawn C. Sweatt ’05 Robert Sweetin ’11 Thomas J. Tarkoff ’92 Andrew P. Tauriainen ’01 Vida L. Thomas ’93 Bruce M. Timm ’98 Serge Tomassian ’83 Members of the 2011 Pacific McGeorge Alumni Association Board of Directors in attendance at an April board meeting included: front row, from left: Morgan Smith, ’93; Jennifer Scott; ’99, Shanti Halter, ’01; Marianne Waterstradt, ’03; Kim Kakavas, ’08; and Kimberly Delfino,’93. Second row, Hector de Avila, LL.M. ’03; Robert Sweetin, ’11; Jim Day, ’73; John Masterman, ’78; Dustin Johnson, ’04; Professor Thom Main; Dionne Choyce, ’01; and Nirav Desai, ’04. Marianne L. Waterstradt ’03 Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 25 Alumni News 1960s 1972 1973 Class Representative Class Representative Class Representatives Burl W. Waits Gordon P. Adelman Rudy Nolen Clarence Walden ’65 Gordon P. Adelman As judge of the “Court of Love,” I am currently serving on the Frank Y. Jackson I solemnized 38 marriages in Sacramento County Grand Jury. It I had the pleasure of watching my 2010. Since presiding at my first is a rewarding learning experience son, Will, sworn in as an attorney ceremony in March 1960, I have that is shared by 19 jurors. Our in November. He is a Pacific officiated at more than 2,000 goal is the improvement of city and McGeorge graduate and gave the weddings. (Woodland, CA) county government. We also sit for commencement address for his criminal indictments. I didn’t work class. I have been a judicial officer this hard when I was being paid. for 21 years, the last three on the Try it – but only after retirement. Court of Appeal in Los Angeles. In (Sacramento) the fall, my wife Joni and I enjoy Will Mattly ’69 Mattly was inducted into the Oroville Union High School District’s Hall of Fame. From 1971 to 1987, he Richard K. Corbin Attorney’s Office, first as a deputy Corbin has joined the California district attorney before his election State Board of Equalization as a to head the office in 1979. He also tax counsel III specialist. He was Robert J. Ornellas served as an assistant U.S. Attorney previously general counsel for I am now retired and enjoy spending and assistant district attorney in Integrated Solutions for Government time with our five grandchildren. Lander and Churchill counties in and Business, Inc. (Sacramento) (Fresno, CA) Ross E. de Lipkau David Roark I co-authored a book, The Nevada Roark negotiated a $160,000 Law of Water Rights, published in settlement in Ventura Superior January 2011 by Rocky Mountain Court for a plaintiff injured in a slip Mineral Law Institute. (Reno, NV) and fall. He is a principal in the Nevada. (Elk Grove, CA) 1970 Class Representatives Raul A. Ramirez John A. DeRonde, Jr. Terence B. Smith If any of you are interested in a Ronald S. Smith I went to Nepal and Mount Everest, and had a fantastic trek — glad to be alive and well. (Beverly Hills, CA) 1971 Class Representative Phil Hiroshima Silberberg helped to negotiate a confidential $3.45 million settlement Let’s get going on a long overdue as co-counsel for a plaintiff. The event. (Davis, CA) civil rights case involved excessive David Johnson Johnson represented the state as cross-complainant in a Calaveras County Superior Court case that settled for $3.375 million involving an amusement ride that collapsed which is limited to family law, the Law Office of David B. Johnson. collaborative, mediation and private (Gold River, CA) with work and lots of travel with my wife, Cecilia Delury. We have five grandchildren. (Carmichael, CA) O.J. Solander with the State Bar of California in January 2011. (Sacramento) Summer 2011 Angeles, CA) Britton at jbritton@surewest.net. fair in 2008. He is a principal in office and staff assistance. I’m busy Law Offices of David L. Roark. (Los Marshall Silberberg I continue with my solo practice, former partners provide me with an his wife, Rhonda. (Valencia, CA) derondelaw@sbcglobal.net, or John and injured 23 people at the county judging. Phil Hiroshima and my games with Richard Edwards and 2012 reunion, please email me at H. Vincent Jacobs 2010 and applied for inactive status P a c i f i c L aw attending the Nevada football worked in the Butte County District I retired from Caltrans Legal in June 26 George F. Wolcott Jean S. Klotz I have still not retired and currently represent the California Federation of Mineral Societies. I have nine grandchildren and four great grandchildren. (Placerville, CA) force by police officers and medical malpractice charges against a hospital. In another confidential settlement earlier in the year, he was co-counsel for a family that received $5.75 million in a medical malpractice birth injury case. He is a principal in the Law Offices of Marshall Silberberg. (Newport Beach, CA) George F. Wolcott We are busy. The Hanford Nuclear Reservation received $1.92 billion of stimulus money. A small part is rubbing off on our business. Our daughter got her MBA (wine business) in Bordeaux, France, last year. We attended the graduation, and then traveled in France and Italy for four weeks. We are healthy, active and enjoying life, and still travel. (Richland, WA) Photography: Steve Yeater Phillip D. Wyman Presiding Justice Scotland Retires With High Honors I am working with the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission and Presidential Library in Illinois, and have secured the “With Malice Toward None” Library of Congress Exhibit for the California Museum of History, Women & the Arts. I worked to secure legislation promoting Indigenous Californian By Michael Curran Native American Languages that are close to extinction. I am promoting the Lincoln legacy through 150th anniversary of the Civil War. I testified before the State Fair Political Practices Commission leading to new regulations requiring timely disclosure of independent expenditures. The changes were supported by Common Cause and other reform advocates, including voters previously kept in the dark. (Tehachapi, CA) 1974 Class Representative Gary L. Vinson James Crockett Crockett won an $854,175 verdict as co-counsel for a plaintiff in Nevada’s Eighth Judicial District Court in a case involving a 2005 auto accident caused by a cab driver. The court also awarded $89,000 in expenses and $71,000 in prejudgment interest. He is a principal in the firm of Crockett & Myers. (Las Vegas, NV) Robert C. De Voe I provide pro bono legal assistance to military retirees and their elderly survivors, and also a no fee notary service for retired and active military personnel. (Sacramento) Jay P. Donahue My most outstanding accomplishment is that I am now blissfully retired and loving life. As a career objective, retirement is the highest goal we should all aspire to. (Herndon, VA) More than 350 Pacific McGeorge alumni have served or are serving as judges in various courts across the country. None has had a more distinguished career than Art Scotland, ’74. Scotland retired at the end of the year as the presiding justice of the California Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District. The guest list at his retirement party read like a “Who’s Who” of the State Bar of California. Scotland’s former Court of Appeal colleague, Tani Cantil-Sakauye, the new chief justice of the California Supreme Court, emceed the program, and speakers included Steve Merksamer, ’75, Judge Morrison England, ’83, Bob Buccola, ’83, and Judge Connie Callahan, ’75. There were also video tributes from four governors, three attorneys general, and Associate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy of the Supreme Court of the United States. Pacific McGeorge and our alumni have held a special place in Scotland’s lengthy community service agenda over the years. A familiar face on campus, he has been a member and president of the Sacramento chapter of the American Inns of Court, served on dean’s search committees, presided over swearing-in ceremonies, and participated in numerous MCLE programs. “As an undergraduate from 1964 to 1968, my emphasis was less on studying and more on the social aspects of college life,” Scotland recalls. “Although I had matured when I applied to Pacific McGeorge in 1971, I was fortunate that the school gave me the chance to prove it, and then provided firstrate, practical instruction that prepared me well for the practice of law. Thus, I have a soft spot in my heart for Pacific McGeorge and enthusiastically support its educational programs.” During his 21 years on the appellate bench, Scotland collected enough awards to furnish a spare bedroom, including the 2010 Ronald M. George Award from the Judicial Council of California as Jurist of the Year. The award honors extraordinary dedication to the highest principles of the administration of justice, a fitting tribute to a man whose energy and enthusiasm for the justice system has inspired many others. “How fortunate I am to have served as a trial judge and appellate justice for almost 24 years with exceptionally talented jurists and staff whom I respect and whose company I enjoy,” Scotland says. “It has been an added pleasure to have done so in the Sacramento legal community with its many skilled, dedicated, and distinguished attorneys. I’ve had a great life in the law and am thankful to Pacific McGeorge for making that possible.” Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 27 Kim E. Gilbert Michael Bigelow Bryan C. Hartnell Mary M. Linde My ex-husband, Herb Gross, and I I had the honor of arguing before I have been appointed to the State I am a grandmother to six. My remarried on Valentine’s Day 2009 the Supreme Court of the United Bar Board of Legal Specialists. “free time” is spoken for most after 19 years apart and nine States in the matter of Walker (Redlands, CA) weekends. I have been keeping a years back together. (As a family v. Martin, No. 09-996 in late law specialist, now is this really November. I thank McGeorge a good move?) Herb is a forensic professors Emily Garcia Uhrig and neuro-psychiatrist specializing in Michael Vitiello for their guidance mild/moderate brain injury due to and support during my preparation. trauma, lead paint or (toxic) mold (Sacramento) exposure, and is on the faculty at UCI Brain Imaging Center. We’re spending quite a lot of time traveling the U.S., celebrating family/friends special events. (Note: Always encourage one child to live in Hawaii. Also encourage them to plan for retirement there.) We are happy and relatively healthy. Life is good! (Fair Oaks, CA) John W. Hawkins I spent two weeks in Costa Rica, Central America with family, son Vinton, ’88, daughter Sharon M. region for the last 30 years, but I’m looking for a change of venue soon. (Truckee, CA) Hawthorne, grandson Conrad and Hayne R. Moyer granddaughter Hannah. I practiced I transferred my business to KMTG Steven J. Fields law from 1975 to 2009 and was four years ago with the goal of Much has changed in my life since appointed a Nevada Supreme retirement within one year. Since graduation. I have been single Court settlement judge in 2008. then, my practice has grown 230 for the last six years. My oldest I am now fully retired and moved percent and I have been allowed to son, Aaron (34), is married with my corporate office to my home reduce my workload and supervise two girls, and is working with a address. (Reno, NV) cases only. Susan and I take Canadian life insurance company. My next oldest, Brandon (27), is married and a U.S. Marine combat veteran. He is heading back to Omar James James was co-counsel for a vacations every three months. (Fair Oaks, CA) plaintiff water company that won James O’Reilly a $4.6 million bench decision in O’Reilly has merged his law firm with Santa Clara Superior Court in a Jeffrey Burr, ’79, and will direct the groundwater production charge elder law division of Jeffrey Burr, dispute with the Santa Clara Valley Ltd. (Las Vegas, NV) Thomas M. Harrington Afghanistan soon, working for a I retired in November 2009. My private company. Blake (23) is wife, who was a teacher, retired working in landscaping. Taylor in June 2008. I sit on assignment (21) is just finishing his degree about half of the time. I enjoy lots of at Washington State University. travel – Canada, Hawaii, Cambodia, I started practicing Taekwondo Vietnam, Europe, etc. I love being some years ago, but finally quit retired. (Tracy, CA) after achieving a third degree black Chris Kaempfer my courses – Global Lawyering belt – I had to fight with too many Kaempfer was among the 2010 Skills I & II, Advanced Legal Writing, young guys. I started practicing Legal Elite named by Nevada Advanced Appellate Advocacy Spanish in 2005, and I am doing Business magazine. He is a senior and Criminal Law Defense — I am really well with it. I have a girlfriend partner with Kaempfer Crowell the director of the Moot Court in Peru who helps me a lot with the Renshaw Gronauer & Fiorentino. Program. This program is part of language. I have taken five trips to (Las Vegas, NV) the McGeorge Advocacy Program, Robert W. Long After spending the last 35 years in the shopping center management and development business, at the beginning of 2010, I decided to concentrate full time on David Arthur Vineyards and my own wine project, “Montagna Napa Valley,” located on the eastern slopes of the Napa Valley in the Pritchard Hill area. Both wineries concentrate on cabernet and related red grape varietals. (Chicago, IL) Peru in the last eight months. I am still practicing family law. I bought a building with another lawyer about 13 years ago, which will be paid off in another seven years. Perhaps then I could slow down a little. (Bothell, WA) Water District. He is a senior partner in the Aptos firm of Johnson and James LLP. (Aptos, CA) Bruce A. Kilday Some things change; others stay the same. Patrick starts a six-year residency. Elisabeth is the daily program coordinator for the Smithsonian American History Museum. Sue is teaching Michael L. Hanks economics and psychology. And 1975 I am still practicing business, real I’m still working in federal and state estate and estate planning law and courts. (Sacramento) Class Representatives proud grandfather of Savannah Jean mostly still enjoying it. I am now the Fisher. Deb and I continue to be in Ervin A. DeSmet, Jr. love with each other and with life. Ira Rubinoff My best to all. (Gold River, CA) Ronald J. Bath The R. J. Bath Group specializes in classified and unclassified defense analysis, strategic business planning, and corporate acquisition and merger strategy. We are not Robert A. Laurie In addition to my law practice, I am co-founder, VP and general counsel of Sustainable Communities Development, LLC, which develops James Hardesty and implements technologies that Hardesty won retention as a justice are the foundation for sustainable of the Nevada Supreme Court. He communities. I am also pleased will serve another six years on the to announce the arrival of Jack state’s high court. (Carson City, NV) Brooks, my grandson. My daughter an attorney-client legal practice. Megan remains as the talented (Reno, NV) alumni coordinator for McGeorge. (Placerville, CA) 28 bi-state practice in the Reno-Tahoe P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 Edward H. Telfeyan I am now in my 11th year on the McGeorge faculty. In addition to which was rated fifth in the nation in the U.S. News rankings for 2010. This year, I was also awarded the University Podesto Award as the most inspirational teacher in the Pacific faculty. (Carmichael, CA) 1976 Class Representative R. Steven Corbitt Jeremy F. Beeson I am the managing partner of the Sacramento office of Adelson, Testan, Brundo & Jimenez. (Rocklin, CA) Douglas K. deVries I am transitioning to a full-time mediation and arbitration practice – DeVries Dispute Resolution. (Sacramento) Dennis R. Freidig Roberta E. Mendonca Stephen F. Clayton John C. Dyer I was elected chairman of the board I am the state field director of I have a solo practice providing I have retired from the California of Los Medicos Voladores (The GoRail and working in Northern practical Foreign Corrupt Practices Department of Food & Agriculture Flying Doctors) in June 2010. I am California and Nevada. I meet with Act compliance training and internal and relocated to the Lancashire also a pilot. We fly humanitarian elected officials, community leaders investigations for corporate clients, coast of the United Kingdom. I can professionals to Mexico and serve and business chambers to support which is the culmination of 30 years see the Irish Sea and North Wales parts of Central America as well. a stronger economy, effective of international legal practice. Call from my dining room. My son Our membership is about 450 solutions to highway congestion, a me if you have FCPA questions, graduated from Florida Coastal Law – consisting of pilots, doctors, cleaner environment and improved or if you know a company that School in May 2010. I procured my dentists, optometrists, translators quality of life by advocating for wants someone to run an FCPA British passport (I am a dual citizen) and volunteers. Last year, we increased use of freight rail compliance program. American and relocated June 15, 2010. served more than 7,500 people. transportation. For fun, there’s companies doing business overseas (Lytham St. Annes, United Kingdom) (Auburn, CA) Zydeco, Pilates, garden herbs and operate in a difficult environment friends. (West Sacramento, CA) trying to avoid demands for Michael A. Hackard bribes, kickbacks and falsification Lisa and I will celebrate our 39th Randy Paragary anniversary this year. We have four Paragary was the subject of a children and two grandchildren – all lengthy feature story in Valley in Northern California. In recent Community Newspapers. The Joseph De Hope years, I’ve served on a number of restaurateur has spent more DeHope has joined Kaufman charitable education and foundation than 40 years in the retail food Dolowich Voluck & Gonzo as a boards. I served as the president and beverage business and now partner. Previously with Hinshaw of “Preserving Our Past…Building owns nine area establishments. & Culbertson for many years, his Our Future” campaign for the (Sacramento, CA) practice focuses on insurance Diocese of Sacramento. This campaign raised more than $50 million. I was recently informed that W. Stephen Scott Scott was appointed by Governor of records so I have plenty of Dorothy Nash Holmes I was elected as a judge in the Municipal Court and started a six-year term in November 2010. business. (Piedmont, CA) (Reno, NV) R. Marilyn Lee I have retired and am enjoying coverage and professional liability litigation. (San Francisco, CA) life without work, as many of you are, but there’s no slowing down (except daily naps!) More time to read, serve on UCSB Foundation and University of California Press Foundation (think Mark Twain’s Arnold Schwarzenegger to the San Ronald L. Dick “new” autobiography from 1910) Joaquin County Superior Court. He After 10 years of retirement, I’m still and docent at El Pueblo de Los has been a partner in the firm that busy with too much to do, but enjoying Angeles/Olvera St., Harvey is still evolved into Scott & Nichols since it all. JoAnn and I are putting the private and judging part time. Richard H. Halladay 1982. He fills the vacancy created finishing touches on the restoration We had a great trip to Wyoming The Bank of Stockton is doing by the retirement of Judge Thomas of our old house in the Curtis Park – Grand Tetons, Yellowstone and quite well. Our trust and investment Harrington, ’74. (Stockton, CA) neighborhood. I volunteer at the Cody. Come tour El Pueblo with me. group has 20 employees – seven Shriners Hospital in Sacramento. In (Los Angeles, CA) administrators, two portfolio three administrative assistants and 1977 February, Thursdays will be golf days, seven operations staff. I am looking Class Representatives club. JoAnn and relatives are recruiting I’ve been rated “AV Preeminent for 20 years” by Martindale-Hubbell. (Carmichael, CA) managers, one compliance officer, forward to many more years with the bank. (Stockton, CA) Roy Hashimoto Hashimoto was profiled in the San Francisco Daily Journal. He is a judge on the Alameda County Superior Court. (Oakland, CA) Mike McGowan McGowan was elected first vice president of the California State Association of Counties at the organization’s annual meeting in Riverside County. The attorney and businessman has been a member of the Yolo County Board of Supervisors since 1993. (West Sacramento, CA) R. Marilyn Lee because the season starts for the Tsubaki Golf Club, a Japanese seniors me to do things I wouldn’t normally do, Bert Levy Levy won retention as a justice of the California Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate District, in Fresno. He has served on the appellate court since Gary F. Zilaff such as playing a dog in her 2010 play, Louise Lowe Chiu Chinese New Year, which coincided William A. Maddox with Valentine’s Day, in Hong Kong Maddox won election as Storey on a three-week trip by our “Double County District Attorney in Nevada Happiness Mah Jong Club.” Our son, with 58 percent of the vote. He is Bryan, lives in Australia with his wife, a former U.S. Attorney, Northern Marina, and our granddaughter, Ruby. District of Nevada, and former We hope to get over there again soon, judge of the Nevada First Judicial but for the time being, we’re very District. (Virginia City, NV) Chiu was elected to the Taft Union High School Hall of Fame and will be formally inducted in the late spring. An OBGYN, she served as the chief medical legal officer for Kaiser Permanente in Northern California until her retirement in 1996. (Sacramento) “Queen of Egypt.” Last year, we spent thankful to have Skype. (Sacramento) June 1997. (Fresno, CA) John W. O’Donnell For 24 years, I have served on the staff and board of the Santa Fe Institute for Spirituality under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe in New Mexico. See www.sfis.org and click on “Catechism Video” for examples of current activities and programs. (Santa Fe, NM) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 29 John Brydon Michael B. Rich Sullivan has retired after 15 years Brydon won a defense verdict in I am prosecuting loan fraud cases as president of the Civil Justice Alameda Superior Court in a product to revoke the licenses of real estate Association of California, an liability asbestos exposure case in brokers and salesperson licensees industry-sponsored organization that which the plaintiff demanded $2 million before the office of Administrative advocates legal reforms to restrict before trial. He is a senior partner in Hearings. The Department of Real Judith A. Smith tort recovery. (Sacramento) the San Francisco firm of Brydon, Hugo Estate has continued to be at the & Parker. (San Francisco, CA) forefront of law enforcement efforts David Erickson Brad Thomas Thomas won dismissal of a Bruce W. Busch complaint in a Napa Superior Court After about six years of voluntary case in which the plaintiff sought service, I was recently elected to $100,000 in damages following an serve on the Board of Directors of the auto accident. He is a principal in the Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County. firm of Mason Thomas. (Davis, CA) This unique 32-year old non-profit organization is financed only by to curtail the mortgage fraud crisis. We coordinate with other law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, the U.S. Attorney General, the state Department of Justice, district attorneys and local police agencies. (Sacramento) 1978 donations. We provide nursing support Thomas F. Riley and medical equipment, so that I have retired after a long career as terminally ill patients can spend the a government attorney for state, Class Representatives remainder of their lives at home. This county and city governments. My has been one of the most rewarding new home office will allow me to Peggy Chater-Turner activities of my life. (Sequim, WA) take cases at my discretion — a Bruce Beesley Thomas O. Freeburger Thomas O. Freeburger welcome change! (Reno, NV) Class Representatives Barbara L. Haukedalen Erickson won a defense verdict in Sacramento Superior Court in a multiple automobile accident case that involved an eight-day trial. He is a partner with Donahue, Bates, Blakemore & Mackey in Sacramento. (Sacramento) Noel M. Ferris I was thrilled to be admitted to the American College of Trial Lawyers. My eldest daughter, Abbie, is an attorney for Earth Justice in New York City. Caroline is in her second year at Columbia Law and the most naturally born to the profession, Hilary, is promising a doctorate Nothing much is new or different. Steven C. Sabbadini I’m still putting in lots of hours on I am still enjoying the practice of the Railroad Museum’s excursion law in Woodland, Yolo County. The (Sacramento) train crew. My grandson is 11 and highlight of the year was when Bob nearly as tall as me. I’m having fun Zimmerman came to a Halloween Gary H. Gale with him, trout fishing, attending ice party as Steve Sabbadini (a smaller on the first of the year. (Reno, CA) hockey and baseball games (among version). He almost got to go home Steve Block many other things). I don’t see many with my wife. (Woodland, CA) classmates anymore besides John Beesley was named to serve on the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada. The attorney, a partner and bankruptcy group leader for Lewis and Roca LLP, fills the vacancy of a judge who retired Block has joined JAMS Sacramento Resolution Center, a mediation and arbitration service, specializing as a mediator, arbitrator, and discovery master for disputes. A former member of the McGeorge Alumni Association Board of Directors, Powell, Tim Hughes and occasionally Kris Sudhoff Door. (Sacramento) Commission on State Mandates by Atascadero State Hospital Advisory Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Board. An Atascadero private (Dinuba, CA) Paul A. Brisso Water Commission in San Luis commissioner on the Nacimiento Obispo County. (Atascadero, CA) College of Trial Lawyers in 2002. I am a former Humboldt County Mark W. Gilbert Gilbert has retired after many years as chief legal counsel at Bar Association president and former director of the Association Tulare County Board of Supervisors. Jones was appointed to the arbitration specialist. (Sacramento) and inducted into the American Worthley won reelection to the He was also reappointed to the since 1979, he has served as a I was elected to ABOTA in 1991 Steve Worthley Robert M. Jones attorney who has run his own firm he is a long-time mediation and the Sacramento Regional Transit Joan C. Wright No marriages, births or deaths to report. Still competing horses, and in an annual sprint triathlon, and, oh pursuing the National Audubon Society’s claim that aging needed replacement to reduce As special counsel for the Florida the number of bird deaths in the Department of Transportation, I area. A partner in the Sacramento am legal counsel to two significant law firm of Kenyon Yeates, he public-private projects – the Miami helped the plaintiff reach an Tunnel and I-595 reversible lanes equitable agreement bench project. These involve construction decision in Alameda County Court. and 30-year maintenance by foreign (Sacramento) Canada and Africa. (Eureka, CA) consortiums. (Tallahassee, FL) P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 I’m still mourning over the loss of Chris Holbrook – the first Moonie to pass on to “green” pastures. I continue to lament having to play golf with Alan (keeps beating me with his 18” back swing). My wife, kids and bankruptcy law keep me busy when I’m not playing golf or doing an occasional mortgage loan. (Folsom, CA) Allan D. Hardcastle With recent retirements from our bench, I am one of the most senior judge. I’m looking forward to traveling Yeates was a member of a team P. Gregory Jones I have hunted extensively in Alaska, haven’t killed them or myself yet! Bill Yeates California and Nevada. I was named 2005-2010. Over the past 25 years, I have two kids in college and judges with 14 years. Classmate District. (Sacramento) Northern California Super Lawyer, in psychology. Parker is the best. yes, practicing law. (Carson City, NV) of Defense Counsel of Northern by a San Francisco magazine as a 30 1979 John Sullivan Altamont Pass wind turbines Mark Tansil is now our most senior to Ashland, OR, in November with Judith Carlisle, Brad Ledu and Paul Gautreau. (Santa Rosa, CA) Julie Stothers Horner Three years ago, we moved to Tucson. I have gone inactive but help my husband Lee in his practice. We cover the state of Arizona for bankruptcies, real estate matters and probate. Our three kids are doing well and I’m going to be a grandma. (Cortaro, AZ) Brian R. Kirchoff Daniel Wong F. LaVar Christensen William A. Robertson I retired in October 2007. Now, After meeting Judith Bratcher In 2010, I was elated to return In January, I was appointed dean of instead of negotiating deals, I in August 2009, last year was and serve again in the Utah House the Empire College School of Law. negotiate lap time between two incredible. We went to her of Representatives (previously The dean for the previous 12 years, cats. (San Rafael, CA) hometown, Boise, several times, served 2002-2006). I authorized Pat Broderick, ’87, was elected to the visited Disneyland in March and and passed Utah’s Constitutional Sonoma County Superior Court. My Washington D.C. in April. Judy and Amendment in support of marriage daughter, Sara, is on the faculty of I got married in Ketchum, Idaho between a man and a woman Boise State so I travel to Idaho often in July. We had a big wedding and now serve on Education and to see my two grandsons. (Cotati, CA) reception in Ketchum and another Judiciary Committees. Sue and I in Reno. We bought and moved into have been married for 35 years and Ronald R. Small a house in August. We had a great have five grandchildren. (Draper, UT) Bradley J. LeDu Judith, ’79, and I returned to the Bay Area after four happy years living in Perth, Australia. I worked as head of Chevron’s law department in Australia, and Judith took a sabbatical from her practice. We lived two blocks off the beach and took full advantage of our location by spending holidays traveling throughout Asia. However, there is no place like home and we’re glad to be back with family and friends. Judith resumed her law practice in Vallejo and I returned to the law department at Chevron’s headquarters in San Ramon. Our two sons are on their own now. The oldest is a corporate tax planner at PriceWaterhouse and the youngest is a student at USC law school. Good grief, where has the time gone? (Alamo, CA) Street Vibrations/Housewarming/ Judy’s 50th birthday party in September. We went to my 40th high school reunion in Paso Robles in October. In November, the Nevada Wolf Pack beat the Boise State Broncos (much to Judy’s dismay). I left the Nevada Attorney General’s Office, and accepted a job backpack and camp during the I am still judging in Placer County. I good weather. (Sacramento) have a great wife, three daughters James D. Struck and two grandchildren. I still work with McGeorge in the Trial Advocacy project and am an adjunct at William Jessup. I would love to hear from you about the last 30 years. (Rocklin, CA) taking more time off. Coaching youth After many years of working for and my Modesto Christian Kingsmen City Attorney’s Office and the City of Silicon Valley high tech companies, novice team (ages 8 - 10) went 12-0 Reno in January 2011. (Reno, NV) handling corporate tax, I changed and won a super bowl. (Modesto, CA) direction this year, opening a solo Kelly J. Warren very much. (Boulder Creek, CA) Nevada Business magazine. She is James Struck gives us an excuse for football is another passion of mine, Class Representatives Nevada’s Top 25 Attorneys list by now. We are grandparents and Eli Dan T. Jett had frequent falls. (Dixon, CA) Morgan was named to the Northern practicing law together – 14 years deputy city attorney for the Reno instability when walking and I have Ann Morgan Carolyn and I continue to love offer to become the chief criminal 1980 I am currently disabled due to some just work part time. I plan to travel, Larry D. Gaddis practice concentrating on estate Margaret C. Lum I retired in December 2010 and Richard A. Harris planning and probate, as well as tax. I am enjoying the gentlemanly practice I continue to serve the people of the San Gabriel Valley. I just concluded 2 years as President of the Eastern Bar Association of Los Angeles County. I Martha Opich am making waves with my prowess Doug Kraft, ’91E, formed our firm in on the California Lawn Bowling rinks Bruce B. Alexander February 2008. We now employ two and I am the reigning club champion in Pomona. (Pomona, CA) Paul Richardson I went inactive in the State Bar from associates (both McGeorge graduates). a senior partner with Jones Vargas. 2010 (passed Bar in 1980). I do We specialize in representing lenders (Reno, NV) a limited amount of trustee work, “cradle to grave,” i.e. fund loan using both the ‘J.D.’ and ‘Private origination through workout collection, Trustee’ on my new business card. foreclosure and bankruptcy. Rick is still 1981 At age 72, I am busier than I really with the Placer County DA (28 years Class Representatives want to be. (Sacramento) and counting) and still enjoys putting Fritz-Howard R. Clapp the bad guys away. (Rocklin, CA) Jennifer J. Tachera Marjorie Swartz Swartz, an attorney and longtime public interest lobbyist, has joined the California Assembly Health Committee as its principal Claudia Backlund Morehead consultant. (Sacramento) In addition to the Morehead Firm, William H. Parish Richard Bailey APC, and my non-profit practice, I Parish has been selected as a I divorced in May 2000; in February recently joined the General Counsel Northern California Super Lawyer 2006, I remarried. I retired in March LLC, a virtual law firm, providing by Super Lawyers magazine. The 2007 and moved to Oregon to join legal services to corporate clients. founder of Parish & Small, a civil my wife. We have custody of her (Newport Beach, CA) trial and appellate law firm, he grandson (14). I am involved in the Boy has been in practice for 30 years. Scouts at three levels: I served as a (Stockton, CA) staff member at the Scout’s National Wendy Slavkin Slavkin spoke on “Substance Abuse in the Legal Profession: Prevention, Detection and Treatment” at the McGeorge Alumni Association Southern California MCLE in Long William Brodbeck Beach. She is a principal in the Law Brodbeck was co-counsel for a Offices of Wendy K. Slakin. successful defense team in U.S. Ned Pillersdorf (Los Angeles, CA) District Court, Eastern District of We transformed the law practice California, in a prisoner’s rights into primarily representing clients case involving charges of racial who suffered damage as a result of and religious discrimination. He is unlawful coal mining activities. Our a state deputy attorney general. office website is www.pillersdorflaw. (Sacramento) com. (Van Lear, KY) John Stie Stie was promoted to lead appellate attorney for the California Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District. (Sacramento) Jamboree last summer. I am in charge of picking up food for the St. Vincent De Paul Food Pantry, Eucharistic Minister, and on the piano and organ committee. I am also treasurer for our local chapter of the Air Force Association. Where did all my free retirement time go? (Portland, OR) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 31 Thomas M. Dunipace Paul L. Rees Bridget Baynes Debra S. Petersen Debbie and I are planning retirement. I’ve expanded my wealth Hammerquist After 19 years in the Franchise Tax We just bought a house at Quail management practice by taking I am enjoying retirement and raising Board, Legal Division, I decided Creek, south of Tucson, Arizona. on a partner and we expect to my grandchildren (10, 12 and 14). to open my own practice in July Seth is graduating veterinary school add another in a few months. The They are all busy and involved. One 2010, specializing in tax and estate from the University of Pennsylvania. volatility in the financial markets of them dances at the Hyatt Hotel planning. It’s been a good move. We are starting to wind down. Stop has been good for our practice. two nights per week, dancing hula, My office is down the hall from my by for golf and wine sometime. Beth and I are approaching our 30th playing the ukulele and piano. I knew husband’s financial planning firm. My (Dublin, OH) wedding anniversary. Our 2 boys that law school was getting me oldest boys are at Wheaton College are doing great. Josh is pursuing ready for some big job. We have a (outside Chicago), and my youngest the ’10 year plan’ on finishing guest house on our property so feel is singing, dancing and acting his college and hopefully will be done free to come and visit. (Koloa, HI) way through Jesuit high school. Noreen Evans Evans won election to the California Senate in District 2, winning 63 soon. Sean is working as a software percent of the vote against a engineer for Google in Dublin, Republican rival. The attorney is completing her third and last term in the California Assembly. Noreen Evans, ’81, was named Legislator Ireland, and absolutely loves it. We expect to visit him later this spring. (Carmichael, CA) Gammick won his sixth term as Washoe County District Attorney, I’ve been teaching tax practice and procedure at McGeorge the last few years. (Fair Oaks, CA) defeating Roger Whomes,’85, a William Slaughter Reno attorney. It was Gammick’s Slaughter won dismissal of a of the Year by the California Randall Wilson first contested general election in breach-of-contract complaint against branch of the Susan G. Komen Wilson has joined Kronick Moskovitz 15 years in office. (Reno, NV) a large condominium homeowners’ for the Cure nonprofit. The state Tiedemann & Girard and will run the legislator was cited for her efforts Sacramento firm’s new Roseville to restore funding for breast cancer office. He was previously a principal screening. (Santa Rosa, CA) in Sinclair Wilson. (Roseville, CA) Sal Gugino Gugino continues to write his monthly “Ask Mr. Lawyer” column for The Communiqué, the magazine of the Clark County Bar Association. The popular column mixes humor with insight into the everyday drama of the legal profession. (Las Vegas, NV) 1982 to President Obama for a seat on the U.S. District Court bench in Nebraska. He has served as a justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court since 1995. (Lincoln, NE) Ken Howard Howard won retention as a judge of the Reno Municipal Court in the November election. (Reno, NV) appellate attorney for the California is a partner in the firm of Procter, Slaughter & Reagan. (Ventura, CA) Court of Appeal, Third Appellate William L. Thompson District. (Sacramento) I am the President and CEO of the Marc S. Lessin I’m currently in my 15th year in the Association of Graduates for the USAF Academy. (Colorado Springs, CO) Robert Vaage Debra Steel Sturmer eternally grateful to McGeorge for Vaage negotiated a $3.1 million helping me see the light and pursuing settlement in San Diego Superior medicine as a career. I extend a Court for a plaintiff severely injured warm hello to my good friend, Harry in a 2008 auto accident. He is Drandell, ’82D. (Chapel Hill, NC) a principal in the Law Offices of David Adelstein District Board of Education. He is the managing partner of Bush Carl McMahan Gottlieb Singer Lopez Kohanski McMahan was co-counsel for a Adelstein & Dickinson and has plaintiff who won a $932,250 verdict served as chair of the Los Angeles in Riverside Superior Court in a County Bar Association Labor and medical malpractice birth injury case. Employment Section. (Glendale, CA) He is a principal in the Law Offices of Scott Bartel Carl A. McMahan. (Los Angeles, CA) Scott Bartel was among several Rex W. McQuaide Bullivant Houser Bailey PC lawyers I maintain a private practice here in named to the inaugural publication Pennsylvania. (Johnstown, PA) John H. Pentecost of U.S. News Media Group’s Best I have been with Hart, King & Lawyers 2010 Best and Law Firm Coldren for 23 years — 19 years as rankings. He chairs the large West a partner. My oldest daughter, Kelly, Coast firm’s Corporate Finance & graduated from San Francisco State International Transactions practice. University with a fashion degree. My (Sacramento) youngest daughter Kasey is going to cosmetology school in Lake Forest. I have ascended to the rank of Commodore of the South Shore Yacht Club – “Ahoy, ye matey!” I’m looking forward to a prosperous year in 2011. (San Clemente, CA) P a c i f i c L aw Lane was promoted to senior association in Port Hueneme. He practice of pediatric surgery. I remain South Pasadena Unified School Gerrard has been recommended Beth Ann Lane Class Representative Adelstein was re-elected to the John Gerrard 32 Richard Gammick Summer 2011 Robert F. Vaage. (San Diego, CA) 1983 Class Representatives Paula G. Tripp Susan H. Hollingshead Steven Alm Alm received the Hawaii State Douglas C. Miller Judiciary’s “Jurist of the Year” award Forgive my long silence as I’m always during a ceremony in the state thinking about my classmates. Despite Supreme Court courtroom. He is a difficult year, as far as my health a judge on Hawaii’s First Circuit is concerned, I continue to enjoy my Court whose highly successful involvement in labor relations and the drug probation program has drawn soap operas that come with it. I’ve had nationwide attention. (Honolulu, HI) wonderful support from my classmates for the last 2½ years. I’m still laughing, enjoying my daughter (18), and when I get the chance, my bohemian artistic side. Clicked knuckles to you all! (Carmichael, CA) Robert Auer Auer won re-election to a second, four-year term as District Attorney of Lyon County in Nevada, winning 51 percent of the vote against his challenger. (Yerington, NV) Robert Brumfield Jean C. McEvoy Harriet Steiner Ken Cooley Brumfield has opened his own I received the 2010 Frances Steiner was a member of a plaintiff Cooley lost his bid for a seat firm, the Law Offices of Robert Newell Carr Award from the team that won injunctive relief in in the California State Senate. H. Brumfield, P.C. The business Women Lawyers of Sacramento Alameda Superior Court for several A Democrat, he was a decided litigation specialist was previously in recognition of professional entities who sought to prevent Cal underdog in the special election with Kronick, Moskovitz, Tiedemann excellence and promotion of women State East Bay from expanding runoff in a heavily Republican & Girard. His wife, Lorna Brumfield, in law. (Sacramento) its campus without in-depth EIR district after finishing second in a certification. She is a partner with field of four candidates in a special Best, Best & Krieger. (Sacramento) election in California’s Senate ’83, is a judge on the Kern County Superior Court. (Bakersfield, CA) J, Michael McGuire McGuire has joined the partnership District 1. (Rancho Cordova, CA) Daniel Costa at Archer Norris. His practice K. Blair Thomas Costa won a defense arbitration centers on the California I have spent 25 years as a prosecutor Larry K. Dunn decision in Marin Superior Court construction industry with a – quite a ride. (Danville, CA) My daughter, Karena K. Dunn, has in a case involving a claim of particular focus on mobile home age discrimination and wrongful park operations. (Sacramento) termination. He is a principal in the joined my criminal law practice. She Serge Tomassian The claimants for the San Clemente graduated from Thomas Cooley Law School, Grand Rapids, MI. She Sean McNally landslides in January 2011 are McNally was reappointed to the my clients. The media couldn’t Elliott R. Curzon state Commission on Health, Safety get enough coverage with lots of We are empty nesters now. Our and Workers’ Compensation by interviews. In November 2010, I daughters are pursuing careers in Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. got the first-ever verdict against the Chris S. Graham the medical field. One is a junior The vice president of human County of Orange for $520,000 for Graham, the former managing at Virginia Commonwealth and the resources and government affairs deteriorated storm drains causing partner of the Silicon Valley Office other is a sophomore at Virginia for Grimmway Farms, he has served project damage. (Santa Ana, CA) of Dechert LLP, is the chair of the Tech. My wife, LaDonna, continues on the commission since 2007. volunteer political activity with (Bakersfield, CA) Costa Law Firm (Gold River, CA) former Alaska governor and GOP vice presidential candidate, Sarah Palin. I spent a week in Yemen in spring 2009, advising the government on how to establish I am currently living in Japan and Commission five times. I was the first working for the U.S. Air Force. person to win the Activist-Supporter (Tokyo, Japan) Award from Nevada Bicycle Council, forward to spending more time I’m still litigating cases in the Bay hunting, fishing, skiing and traveling. Area and some other counties (Alexandria, VA) in Northern California. The firm Janis I. Knox We moved to Kansas in 2004. After doing oil and gas, and serving as a public defender in a heavy trial work office, I was offered the position of I was able to chair the Washoe County Open Space and Regional Parks Jeffrey G. Nevin is now up to 10 people and still hiring. I recruited and hired a young McGeorge grad, so that’s a lot of fun. I’m too busy for golf and after two face plants at Mt. Reba, I think the Nevada State Bar exam the first time in October 2009. (Reno, NV) Trade Secret Practice, a member Clifton J. Young Marilyn A. Michaels securities markets. I’m looking graduated in 2 ½ years and passed as well as being the former president and race director for FWSA Sierra League (twice). I still cycle as much as possible. (Reno, NV) of the IP Practice Group Executive Committee and a partner in the commercial and intellectual property group of Dechert LLP. Chris formerly worked for Berliner Cohen and Oppenheimer Wolff & Donnelly. His first novel, Winery Peak (Ramble House 2009) has recently been followed by the non-fiction book, The Way of the Lawyer: Strategies and Tactics for 1984 Negotiations, Presentations and Litigation. (Mountain View, CA) Robert Green Class Representative Patricia A. Day Green was a member of a large pastime. (San Francisco, CA) Stephen W. Berrier Darryl Roberts I was appointed to the Superior equitable settlement with Hyundai for a little over a year now and I am semi-retired. (Harper, KS) Roberts negotiated a $100,000 County Counsel in Harper, KS – a whole new area. I have been there Brian Kunzi Kunzi took 50.6 percent of the vote to win election as Nye County District Attorney. (Tonopah, NV) Timothy Lee Lee negotiated a $16.32 million settlement for his clients in a Los Angeles Superior Court inverse condemnation case against the city of Los Angeles and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. He is a principal in the Law Offices of Timothy R. Lee. (Los Angeles, CA) I can safely rule out skiing as a settlement in Napa County Superior Court for the state in a code violation case. He is a Napa County deputy district attorney. (Napa, CA) Susan Sheridan Sheridan was co-counsel for a plaintiff who was awarded a $62,500 settlement in a Sacramento Superior Court employment law case. She is a principal with Sheridan & Associates Law Corporation. (Sacramento) plaintiff law team that reached an Court by Governor Schwarzenegger in December 2010, serving primarily in criminal court (misdemeanors) and small claims. I’m enjoying the new challenges presented by this great honor. (Rio Oso, CA) Central District of California in a classaction case involving auto repairs. A class-action specialist, he is a senior partner in the firm of Green Welling LLP. (San Francisco, CA) Andrea Hoch Carl Calnero Calnero was co-counsel and won a $9 million JAMS arbitration award for the former owner of a Sacramento beer distributorship who was forced to sell his business by a large corporate beer importer to a low bidder two years ago. He is a shareholder at Porter Scott. (Sacramento) Motor America in U.S. District Court, Hoch was appointed to the California Court of Appeal, Third Appellate District, by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. She has served as the governor’s legal affairs secretary since 2005, and was previously the administrative director for the Division of Workers’ Compensation. (Sacramento) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 33 Diane Baldwin Howard Dr. Kevin C. Boileau John Finger Warren Stracener I have been with the public I am the executive director of Finger garnered 48 percent of the Stracener was appointed to El defender’s office for the past 23 Boileau Solutions, the existential vote, but lost the Libertarian Party Dorado Superior Court by Governor years. My current assignment is psychoanalytic institute of Seattle nomination for U.S. Senate in Colorado Arnold Schwarzenegger. He has supervisor of felony trials. It is – psychotherapist, mediator and in the primary election. He is a principal been deputy chief counsel for my 29th wedding anniversary this conflict resolution specialist. in The Money Management Firm, Inc. the Department of Personnel year (for all you naysayers), and (Seattle, WA) (Monument, CO) Administration since 2004. Jack Clarke Dana A. Fox have 3 amazing children I adore. (Sacramento) Clarke was co-counsel for a After 24 years with my first and only Eric T. Lamhofer plaintiff who won a bench decision firm, I moved to Lewis Brisbois in Time does indeed fly. My oldest in Riverside Superior Court for a May 2009 and am very happy. I’m daughter, Ashley, is a freshman school district against a former trying complex civil trials around the at UCLA. Her sister, Brianna, is a employee in an invasion-of-privacy state and in Colorado. I have been high school sophomore. I am just case involving confidential student married to Rose for 25 years. My about to complete my seventh year records. He also spoke on “Civility in daughters, Kelley (21) and Rachel (17) at Wolfe Wyman LLP, practicing the Legal Profession” on January 22 are seniors in college and high school, mortgage banking, insurance at the McGeorge Alumni Association respectively, and continue to shine. defense and business litigation. Southern California MCLE in Long Life is good. (La Canada Flintridge, CA) Best wishes to all of the Class of Beach. He is a partner with Best 1984. (Irvine, CA) Best & Krieger. (Riverside, CA) Hill was named senior vice president Ellen Corbett of Team Beachbody Global Sales, Corbett won 66 percent of the vote a subsidiary of Beachbody LLC to cruise to a second term in the that distributes popular fitness and California Senate, where she will weight-loss products. His prior career represent Senate District 10 in the includes similar executive sales East Bay for another four years. positions for Melaleuca and Tahaitian Thomas P. Aplin (San Leandro, CA) Noni International. (Santa Monica, CA) I specialize in all areas of real Lawrence D. Doyle Thomas A. Johnson Lobbying — I have returned to the After over 20 years as a prosecutor legislative arena as a registered for the U.S. Attorney and County contract lobbyist and consultant. of Sacramento, I opened my own My initial (hopefully of a select few) firm in Sacramento, focusing on lobbying client is the Conference of federal criminal defense. I have California Bar Associations. I also hired two McGeorge graduates as provide assistance (particularly in associates — Kristy Kellogg, ’10, and the frantic final month of session) Michael Moorey, ’11. (Fair Oaks, CA) 1985 Class Representative Cheryl L. Van Steenwyk property and business litigation. I celebrated my 50th birthday scuba diving in Indonesia. I plan to hike the Inca Trail in Peru this year. (Laguna Niguel, CA) Deborah Bain Bain was appointed to the Interstate Commission for Adult to other lobbyists, researching and Supervision by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. She is a deputy attorney general for the state of cases and projects involving My career has progressed from private practice, to many years at the Nevada Attorney General’s Office, to UNLV and LVMPD. I have to say my current position as assistant General Counsel for the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department is the most rewarding. I am involved with the South Nevada Association of Women Attorneys, having served on the Board and as past president. My husband, Bill, and I try to spend as much time as possible at our vacation home in the mountains of P a c i f i c L aw devising strategy, and providing expanded my practice to include Charlotte M. Bible Southern Utah. (Henderson, NV) developing advocacy materials, lobbying support. Law — I have California. (Sacramento) 34 Jeff Hill (Placerville, CA) 1986 Class Representative Andrea C. Nelson Tim Blaine Blaine was co-counsel for a defense party in a wrongful death lawsuit that his client was able to settle for waiver of costs, enabling their client to be excluded from a $3 million settlement in Tulare Superior Court. Blaine is a shareholder at Porter Scott. (Sacramento) John R. Clarkson I turned 66 this year and began receiving social security payments. I am still practicing law – no end in sight. As a profession, we must devise a method to deliver legal services to the middle class at a cost they can afford, or the “legal zooms” of the world will eliminate us. (Reno, NV) Marshall C Frasher I am now a plaintiff’s attorney after working for the defense for 24 Don R. Thompson years. (Bakersfield, CA) I am a former Deputy District Katherine L. Gallo Attorney, a former Deputy Sheriff and a former US Marine. I now have my own law office. (Roseville, CA) I started a blog on California Discovery called www. resolvingdiscoverydisputes.com. legislative intent in all areas (based Brian N. Zanze (Foster City, CA) on over 30 years developing, writing, I’m presently entering my fifth year amending and analyzing bills and as a solo practitioner, specializing in Steven G. Gibbs statutes). I have focused my trusts representing injured workers. My wife of and estates practice on litigation 30 years, Liz, continues in her career and administration (principally on a as a music teacher for a local school contract basis for other attorneys district. My daughter Laura is in her 3rd to limit conflicts with the legislative year of undergraduate; and my son Josh calendar). Mediation — Having will graduate this spring and is applying devoted my professional life to to graduate programs. Activities outside problem-solving within the legislative of work include facilitating men’s and judicial processes, becoming a support groups through the Mankind mediator was a natural and exciting Project (MKP.org) and a leadership option. I practice interest-based position with a lay Buddhist organization mediation in all areas. (Sacramento) (SGI-USA.org). (Redding, CA) Summer 2011 I am the President of the Bakersfield East Rotary Club 2010 – 2011. (Bakersfield, CA) James Harper Harper has joined Best Best & Krieger LLP in Riverside in an of counsel capacity in its business practice group. He previously practiced with McPeters McAlearney Shimoff & Hatt in Redlands and Luce Forward. (San Diego, CA) Bill Lockyer Drakulich Powers Up Nevada’s Energy Export Ambitions Lockyer collected 4.3 million votes, more than any other person running for statewide office, to win his second term as California State Treasurer. He previously served two terms as Attorney General. He also served 25 years in the California Legislature, during which time he attended Pacific By Michael Curran McGeorge. (Sacramento) Geoffrey McConnell McConnell was recognized for his expertise in construction litigation and government contracts in the 2011 edition of the Best Lawyers in America. He is a partner in the firm of Meuleman Mollerup LLP. (Boise, ID) Patrick McNicholas McNicholas was part of a plaintiff team that negotiated a $5 million settlement in U.S. District Court, Central District of California, in a class-action suit against Hewlett-Packard. The suit involved consumers who alleged that a design flaw prevented purchasers from using all of the usable toner in certain print cartridges. He is a senior partner in the firm of McNicholas & McNicholas, one of the leading personal injury contingency firms on the West Coast. (Los Angeles, CA) Bart Mehlhop I have worked as an advocate for injured workers for nearly 25 years, and am looking forward to the next 25 years. I’m hopeful that our new governor, Jerry Brown, and the Insurance Commissioner, Dave Jones, can help, but with the industry I’m in, hope springs eternal. My first son heads to high school next year and the rest of the family is well. Best wishes to all in 2011. (West Sacramento, CA) One of the reasons Pacific McGeorge has launched a J.D. Concentration in Environmental Law is that we have alumni practicing in the field like Kathleen (Morello)Drakulich, ’86. One of Nevada’s leading attorneys in the field of renewable energy, Drakulich is a partner at McDonald Carano Wilson LLP who operates out of its offices in Las Vegas and Reno. In addition to representing developers of energy facilities, she represents Nevada’s leading energy users before the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada. A native San Franciscan, Drakulich attended the University of California at Berkeley and was introduced to Pacific McGeorge by the late Bernie Witkin, an attorney who literally wrote the book on California law. “He was a huge fan of McGeorge and a benefactor who really pushed me to apply and attend,” she says. Drakulich excelled at Pacific McGeorge and met her future husband, Reno attorney Paul Drakulich, ’84. “Gene was a fourthyear evening student and I was a second-year day student. We went to lunch once, and things progressed from there.” Gene’s brother, Victor, ’79, is also a attorney though better known as one of boxing’s top referees. Turning down an offer from a major firm in San Francisco, Drakulich clerked for the Second Judicial District Court in Reno after graduation. A year later, she took a job with the Washoe County District Attorney’s office where she stayed for six years. “It was a fantastic job. I had 25 jury trials (including three death penalty cases),” she says. “I went to a private law firm from there and then took a job with Sierra Pacific Power Company [later becoming general counsel].” “The piece of my current practice that involves environmental law is really a subset of my gas, water and electricity practice,” she says. “You simply cannot practice gas, water and electricity law without a working knowledge of federal, state and local environmental law.” Drakulich will play a key role in furthering Nevada’s ambition to be a primary exporter of renewable energy to California. “In order to do so, Nevada will need to construct additional transmission lines in order to deliver the power across state lines,” she says. “The construction of transmission lines is an extremely complicated undertaking, especially in Nevada where 87 percent of the state is owned by the federal government, and construction of any utility facility on this land requires compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act which is expensive, time consuming and potentially risky.” It’s a herculean legal challenge that demands the best in the business. That’s why Drakulich is involved. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 35 1987 Andrea C. Nelson Greetings class of ’86. The 25th anniversary of our graduation approaches! Debbie Cregger has graciously offered to organize a reunion party. Please email her at dcregger@hotmail.com if you would like to get together this fall, so we know whether to start making plans. If there is sufficient interest, a date will be set and an official RSVP request will follow. As the format of this magazine has changed, my odd little introduction stories will no longer appear. To Class Representative Megan Halvonik Hagop T. Bedoyan In January 2011, I accepted an wishes for the second half of life’s of entertainment matters, with a Lisa A. Specchio Mitchell Alward Floyd tribute band “Which One is Margaret K. Masunaga happy to report that I’ve finished putting my two daughters through college. My younger daughter just graduated from USC’s Marshall (Fresno, CA) I am the elected state delegate for Hawaii, American Bar Association, and the ABA House of Delegates. I also serve on the State of Hawaii Elections Commission and Hawaii Supreme Court Disciplinary Board. I love my job of Sonoma County Superior Court. Billy Kenoi. (Kealakekua, HI) you to continue writing. (Hailey, ID) A trial attorney who served as dean David A. McHale Charities. (La Jolla, CA) Paul J. Pimentel I’ve been doing a fair amount of running lately. It’s strange though, my times are not what they were when I was 26 – not sure why. My brain says I haven’t aged. I have a son in the to an open seat on the bench in working for the Hawaii County mayor, I am the general counsel of the nation’s leading insurer of physicians. Council in the November general election. (Lodi, CA) James V. DeMera III I started my own firm in December 2010. (Woodbridge, CA) Chicago any time! (Napa, CA) Mental Fitness,” is now entering Dunbar won a defense verdict George Mull many student-athletes and adults, for Thrifty Payless Inc. in Orange Superior Court in a slip and fall case. He is a principal in the Dunbar & Associates. (Rolling Hills Estates, CA) Mull was the subject of a feature story in the Lodi News-Sentinel. He is a principal in the Law Office of George W. Mull in Sacramento. Dennis P. O’Connor He’s defending your freedom. You’re Widders, Gibson, Jones & Schneider welcome. (Fresno, CA) in Ventura. A past president of the Ventura County Barristers and Santa Barbara Women Lawyers, her previous legal work includes nine years with Henderson & Borgeson. (Santa Barbara, CA) wonderful life outside work, and Walter D. Herbert get to enjoy my husband and our Several other members of the wonderful daughter. I’ve even Montana Bar and I are working on learned to cook! (Irvine, CA) a publication for potential jurors in Montana. It will clearly explain their right to nullify the law. Montana has made national news on this issue recently! My email address is herbert.dpm.rn@gmail.com. I was admitted to the U.S. Supreme Court in November 2009. I have two grandsons, Amadeus (5) and Kylan (1½). My son Graham is now in third Summer 2011 working with a lot of golfers, and I will have a golf improvement CD coming out soon, which focuses on the mental aspect. I am also working with graduates attempting to pass the bar exam. To learn more, please visit my website at www.thegaromethod.com. Gayle Holderer and living. (Steamboat Springs, CO) Deborah Ortiz Ortiz won 53 percent of the vote in a three-way race to claim a seat on the board of the Los Rios Community Holderer was unsuccessful in her bid for a seat on the Incline Village General Improvement District board of trustees. She operates her own law firm in the South Lake Tahoe College District. A former state suburb. (Incline Village, NV) legislator, she is the vice president Peter Kapetan of public affairs for Planned Parenthood Mar Marte. (Sacramento) kids are doing great. My 14-year-old bench. (Salinas, CA) improvement they are seeking. I am enjoy skiing, running, swimming, biking Mark E. Hood challenges and rewards of the one on one, in whatever area of (Bakersfield, CA) Donna J. Peter – vertical assignment. I enjoy the its 9th year. I am working with year medical school in Australia. I (Billings, MT) I am currently assigned to felonies P a c i f i c L aw bid for a seat on the Lodi City Kevin Dunbar will soon be headed to Afghanistan. as much as I want. I now have a Congressional candidate, lost his My program, “The Garo Method of Friedman has joined Myers, to work at home when I want, and in the June primary as a gladly take a California winter over Army, who was deployed to Iraq and Passon. For me, this means I get Amador who ran unsuccessfully Mark J. Garibaldi (Sacramento) I am now “of counsel” to Galfin & partner in the firm of Bunting, Drayton I was sad to leave Chicago, but will November. (Santa Rosa, CA) Jill Friedman Marcelle S. Strauss slip-and-fall injuries. He is a senior Tony Amador have one of two votes from Hawaii in the class notes, and encourage Executive Vice President of Price store in which a customer had claimed that selects the ABA president. I Broderick was installed as a judge from 1997 to 2010, he won election in Santa Cruz Superior Court for a & Alward LLP. (San Francisco, CA) to keeping up with you all, through I have taken up the position of Alward won a bench defense decision serve on the nominating committee Patrick Broderick of the Empire College School of Law Class Representative my hobby of putting together a Pink of Klein, Denatale, Goldner, Cooper, Rosenlieb & Kimball LLP. I’m also 1988 focus on music. This grew out of adventurous journey. I look forward Tad S. Parzen 36 include a substantial component Pink?” (Sherman Oaks, CA) importantly, she’s already got a job! crosses, farewell, and best My practice has evolved to offer to become an equity partner School of Business – and more those of you my path no longer Daniel A. Johnson Work is busy – plenty of litigation. The son thinks he wants to be an attorney and is constantly trying to impeach me and my husband. Life is good. (Grass Valley, CA) Kapetan was co-counsel for a plaintiff who reached a $75,000 settlement in U.S. District Court, Eastern District of California, in a police negligence excessive force case. He is a partner in the firm of Kapetan & Kapetan. (Fresno, CA) Christine Kubota I am the vice president of the United Japanese Society, director of the Hawaii Senior Life Enrichment Association, and director of the 1989 Class Representatives William W. Palmer Ronald S. Owens Lisa L. Gindes Helker I was sworn in as District Attorney I lead our quality assurance audit of Placer County on December 30, of Shepards product at LexisNexis, 2010. (Meadow Vista, CA) so I really have to know what all our letters and phrases mean. I also Hawaii State Bar Association. I am Billie B. Line, Jr. Shirley Paiz also a member of the Supreme James Gingrich at the State Compensation Insurance Court Committee on Equal Access to the Courts and the incoming chair (July 2011) of the Honolulu Japanese Chamber of Commerce. (Honolulu, HI) Brett Morgan Gingrich was co-counsel for a plaintiff who reached a $1.5 million settlement against the estate of a deceased person who caused serious injury to another in a broadside collision for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation since law in Yuba City. (Salinas, CA) Montessori schools, as my 7-yearold daughter, Eleanor, thrives in the Montessori system. Always was a late starter! (Golden, CO) Hank G. Greenblatt Class Representatives Attorney. He has served the county I won a trial verdict of over $3 Derek R. Longstaff as a public defender. (Bishop, CA) million for a victim of a serious John R. Brownlee Print Maggard Leslie Arnal Maggard spoke on “Practice Joaquin County Superior Court resident had been the chief of staff years since practicing workers’ comp quality metrics methodology, and 1990 Associates. (Chico, CA) Schwarzenegger. The Elk Grove Fund where she has worked for several have a good working knowledge of Gerard Harvey case. He is a partner with Penney & Morgan was appointed to San judgeships by Governor Arnold Paiz was promoted to staff counsel III vehicle accident with my co-counsel, Catia Saraiva, ’04. (Sacramento) Harvey finished second in his race for the office of Inyo County District Arnal has joined Generations, an Pointers for Litigating an Asylum Case in Immigration Court” to the Aaron M. Gumbinger estate and trust firm. She has more To my amazement, I am still with than 20 years experience as an the same firm after 12 years. attorney, most recently as owner of (Walnut Creek, CA) a private law practice. (Sacramento) Barristers Club. He is a judge on the love life on California’s north coast. Bryan G. Martin Katharine C. Baragona Our firm, de Goede, Dunn & Martin, After a delightful period of (San Francisco, CA) Hope everyone is doing well. (Crescent City, CA) merged with the statewide firm “professional repose,” I’ve rejoined Atkinson, Andelson, Loya, Ruud & the full-time work force. Effective Romo. We are continuing our practice, fall 2010, I’ve taken up the focusing on all aspects of school and position of senior infrastructure public agency law. (Fresno, CA) finance specialist in The World 2008. (Stockton, CA) Lisa A. Specchio I have no news to report. I’m working hard and playing hard. I B. Scott Thomsen Thomsen was elevated from commissioner to judge on the Nevada County Superior Court by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Cliff Marcek A former partner with Thomsen & Marcek won a $677,500 verdict Keating then a sole practitioner from for a Las Vegas hotel guest who 1998 to 2005, he has served as a sustained a disc injury and kyphosis commissioner for the Nevada and after being hit by a large sign. He Sierra County Superior Courts for is a principal in the firm of Cliff W. the past five years. (Nevada City, CA) Marcek. (Las Vegas, NV) Elizabeth S. Trimm Bank’s Finance, Economics and Immigration Law Section of the Bar Association of San Francisco’s San Francisco Immigration Court. J. Scott Smith Smith has joined Meyers Nave in its Sacramento office as an appellate specialist. His previous legal experience includes more than a decade of service with Angelo, Urban Development Unit. Areas Kilday & Kilduff. (Sacramento) of focus for this new appointment Melissa Steinberg Kent are financial structuring and financial advisory services for both governmental and private sector infrastructure investment. For I am the owner of a boutique called Mozaniacs Boutique in Tarzana, CA. (Encino, CA) the foreseeable future, I’ll work in Lindy Yokanovich Janiece Marshall Washington Monday-thru-Friday but Yokanovich finished in the middle In December, I was appointed to serve Marshall was sworn in as a justice will continue to “live” in Ridgewood, of an unusual, 24-person pack in a as the 14th senior partner since our of the peace on the Las Vegas New Jersey. I’m fortunate to have race for an open seat in Minnesota’s firm was established in October 1943. Justice Court, to which she was found an ideally located “pied-a- 10th Judicial District. She is founder I am the first woman to hold this elected in November. The former terre” overlooking the Watergate and executive director of Cancer honor. Who would have thought that partner at Lewis, Brisbois, Bisgaard Complex, and the Amtrak train Legal Line, a nonprofit organization the job I got in my second year of law & Smith most recently practiced at service makes for an easy weekly providing free legal help to school through on-campus interviews Anderson McPharlin & Conners LLP. commute. (Washington, DC) Minnesotans affected by cancer. would have turned out so well? Thank (Las Vegas, NV) you, McGeorge, for the start to a (Stillwater, MN) John Doering Andrew J. McCluskey Doering won a bench dismissal of I joined the peace officer ranks an employment law discrimination Howard Weinberg as an inmate caseworker at the case in Stanislaus Superior Court. I retired in November 2009. It prison. I am very challenged by He is the Stanislaus County doesn’t get any better. (Davis, CA) the cast of characters and unique Counsel. (Modesto, CA) fantastic legal career. (Gold River, CA) set of circumstances in a custodial atmosphere. I enjoy camping, kayaking and long walks on the beach. (Sonora, CA) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 37 1991 Class Representatives Gregg S. Garfinkel Mark J. Reichel Robert S. Van Der Volgen, Jr. Phillip Heithecker Daniel R. Gold I have been working in Pasadena Heithecker was co-counsel for a I will become managing partner in since August 2009. LACERA is a successful defense team in a 17-day 2011. (Yorba Linda, CA) great public pension fund, and I medical malpractice misdiagnosis feel very lucky to be working with a trial in Shasta Superior Court. He wonderful staff. (Sacramento) is a senior partner at Washington & Heithecker. (Chico, CA) Sean Beatty in San Diego Superior Court five 1992 weeks after winning another case Class Representatives involving the so-called lemon law David M. Miller in Los Angeles Superior Court. He Lt. Fred Cavese Beatty won a Song-Beverly Act case for Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. is a partner in the firm of Beatty & Myers LLP. (Long Beach, CA) Kelly A. Beall I was elevated to partner with Wolfe In October 2010, I became the president of the Southern California Chapter of the Association of Alison Lukov Foster Corporate Counsel. I was also I am the executive director of Family named 2010 Member of the Year Connections Christian Adoptions, of the Association of Corporate and was designated as 2010 Angel Counsel, an International Bar in Adoption. After a decade of Association of 26,000 in-house being single, I married Karl Davis legal counsel. (Seal Beach, CA) in March 2010. I am serving as the 2011 President of the Academy of California Adoption Lawyers. By Shelby L. Hladon We moved to Tampa last year and Keri Lynn Bush & Wyman LLP. Stuart B. Wolfe, ’91, Bush was part of a defense team and Samuel A. Wyman, ’92, formed that won a summary judgment in the firm in 1994 and it has offices in a Los Angeles Superior Court age Irvine, Walnut Creek and Las Vegas. born. (Modesto, CA) discrimination employment case (Irvine, CA) Stephen E. Oliva Matthew (3) and William (1). We James E. Brown After 36 years with the state, should be here until summer 2012. I retired at the end of 2008. I Come visit. (Tampa, FL) against the UCLA Medical Center. She is a partner with Lewis, Brisbois, Bisgard & Smith LLP. (Los Angeles, CA) Brown was a member of a team that won defense verdict in the time this is published, my first grandson, Timmy, will have been enjoyed a few months of catching up on my deferred maintenance E. Scott Ewing Riverside Superior Court against I recently moved from Deloitte’s San a plaintiff who alleged police Francisco office to Sacramento. misconduct and excessive force. He I handle the firm’s largest is a Riverside senior assistant city FTB controversies and am a attorney. (Riverside, CA) Department of Water Resources on Fernando P. Cavese the challenges. (Carmichael, CA) nationally recognized expert in California income/franchise tax. It’s been a busy year. Debbie joined I recently settled a $50 million tax controversy before the FTB in Sacramento. My partner and I live in the midtown area. (Sacramento) me in retirement in March, and we’ve had the opportunity to travel more and see some sights. We took a couple of cruises, including trips projects. I was invited to work on a part-time basis: first by the Natural Resources Agency, and then by the Delta-related issues. I appreciate (Special Operations Command) is very interesting. John is flying for Delta Airlines and our boys are Stephen R. Holden The Holden Law Group continues to serve employers in labor and employment matters. Because of client demand, we also provide commercial litigation services. In 2011, the firm will be expanding in two ways. Firstly, our employee benefits practice will become I am now the editor of the California full-service, including a 5500 filing Comp Blog (www.californiacompblog. service. Secondly, we will expand our com) and in 2010, was appointed physical office presence in several to the Workers’ Compensation Law key regions of Northern California. It is always fun to reconnect with the to the Mediterranean and the Holy Kaufman was co-counsel for a Land. Our backyard golf course Advisory Commission. (Mill Valley, CA) plaintiff who won a $3 million (Golden Bear Country Club) got settlement in Los Angeles discovered by the Golf Channel and Mark A. Tikosh Superior Court in a wrongful-death local media last year. I made an case involving a pedestrian in a appearance of Golf Channel’s “Golf in crosswalk who was hit by a city America” show in July. The episode bus. He is a senior partner with Lee is still in rerun, and it’s available on & Kaufman. (Los Angeles, CA) Golf Channel’s website, as well as our own website: www.gbcc.webs. really enjoy it. My job at SOCOM Thomas A. Richard Martin Kaufman I am a member of the CFA Institute (Charlottesville, VA). My practice is focused on estate planning, retirement planning and investments, and taxation. (Long Beach, CA) McGeorge community and former classmates. I hope 2011 brings more opportunities to reconnect, and everyone has a wonderful year. (Auburn, CA) Darrin Mercier Mercier was appointed to the Walker v. Martin No. 09-996 before John Demas 1993 Siskiyou Golden Fair Board of the United States Supreme Court. Demas was co-counsel for plaintiffs Class Representatives a law practice. (Yreka, CA) Hard to believe! (Sacramento) who won a $2.76 million verdict Violet R. Radosta in an auto accident wrongful Traci F. Lee Allen C. Ostegar III Robert T. Marshall On November 29, 2010, I argued John Steffen Steffen was among the 2010 Legal Elite named by Nevada Business magazine. He is a shareholder and co-founder of Hutchison & Steffen. com - click on ‘videos’. (Belleville, IL) death case in Tuolomne Superior Court. He is a principal in the firm of Demas & Rosenthal LLP. (Sacramento) Jeffrey Caufield Caulfield won a $7 million settlement in U.S. District Court, Central District of California, in a National Environmental Policy Act case involving soil (Las Vegas, NV) contamination. He is partner in the firm of Caufield & James. (San Diego, CA) 38 William Davis Harn P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 Directors. He owns and operates the 5M Ranch, in addition to having My oldest son is serving an LDS mission in Santiago, Chile, and was there for the earthquake! Cathy continues to be the love of my life and all the kids as well. (Laguna Niguel, CA) Morgan C. Smith John A. Campanella Guy E. Ortoleva Kristy Schieldge I have opened my own law firm in I have been practicing DUI defense I recently narrated the audio- Schieldge has joined the California 2011 which specializes in assisting in Northern California since 1995 book version of These Scars are Department of Consumer Affairs other attorneys with preparing multi- and have been certified by the Sacred, a Vietnam war novel by as staff counsel III in Sacramento. media presentations for mediations National Highway Traffic and Safety Elliott Storm, which describes the (Sacramento) and trials. (Oakland, CA) Association in the administration of lingering effects of post traumatic standardized field sobriety tests. stress disorder. It took several 1994 I am a member of the National weeks to record the 8 hours of College for DUI Defense and the finished material. (Hamden, CT) Class Representatives (Sacramento) Captain Laura H. Heller Guy E. Ortoleva Fernando S. Acosta Bob Varma, ’94D, and I have submitted an article “The Impact of Philippines Overseas Domestic Workers on the Philippines Economy: Benefits and California DUI Lawyers Association. Lawyers and Best Law Firm’s 2010 Anthony Falangetti fifth anniversary of opening my rankings. He is the shareholder-in- Falangetti has co-founded his own law own estate planning office in Los charge of the Sacramento office firm, the Law Offices of Falangetti and Angeles. I am married and have a and is a member of the Corporate Weimortz. He worked for more than 7-year-old son. (West Hills, CA) Finance, Securities and International 14 years as a Los Angeles County deputy district attorney before going into private criminal defense practice Transactions Practice Group. Evan Sussman Sussman has been elected to the Robert B. Wareham Hills Bar Association. The founder Our firm merged with one of Brian N. Gurwitz of Sussman & Associates, he is Colorado’s preeminent appellate After more than 13 years as a recognized as a certified specialist lawyers, Anne Whalen Gill, LLC, in prosecutor, I opened my own family law specialist by the State September 2010. Anne Gill has criminal defense practice in July Bar of California. (Beverly Hills, CA) numerous published opinions, 2009. I’ve seen the light on the dark including controlling case law on Jerry Wiese Vi-Khan (1). Jonathan (13) is now in side! (Irvine, CA) eighth grade and Noelle (15) is a Dennis Haase County District Court bench in one Haase was elevated to tax counsel of the closest races in the state. A IV at the Franchise Tax Board where partner with Williams & Wiese, he he has worked for many years. carried 50.07 percent of the vote Student representation is a very (Sacramento) and won by 522 votes out of nearly interesting field with school issues Valli Israels is good! (Claremont, CA) Michelle A. Ball frequently topping the news. I have begun blogging at http:// edlaw4students.blogspot.com. Check it out for education law information. (Auburn, CA) Eric Barnum Barnum has been appointed deputy general counsel of the National Bar Association, the nation’s oldest and largest network of predominately African American attorneys and judges. He is the head of Schiff Hardin LLP’s labor and employment practice. (Atlanta, GA). Susan Bourland Bostanche Israels was appointed to the Stanislaus County Superior Court by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. She has been a San Joaquin County deputy district attorney since 1995, most recently prosecuting special circumstance capital murder cases. 355,000 cast. (Las Vegas, NV) with McDonough Holland & Allen, he will serve in an of counsel capacity for the Sacramento law firm’s health care, business and litigation, and during law school gave me a David Mathias Mathias was named to the Tulare County Superior Court by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. An attorney whose practice focuses on civil litigation, bankruptcy and agricultural law, he began his career as legal counsel to Cardinal Health. (Visalia, CA) of the Colorado Practice series from Thomson West. (Highlands Ranch, CO) Kim White 1995 Class Representatives in El Dorado Hills. Ryan J. Raftery Matthew Wilber School District. She is a principal in the Law Office of Kimberly A. White Christopher J. Kaeser I was recently elected to my third Stephen Lerner Adams Schoenfeld LLP. Previously Appellate Law and Practice, a part and won a seat on the Rescue Union I gave birth to my second child in Lerner has joined Murphy Austin divorce. She authored Colorado White was the leading vote getter Judith A. Bock The little girl I was pregnant with (Tampa, FL) removal of children during and after Wiese won a seat on the Clark (Modesto, CA) real estate law teams. (Sacramento) granddaughter on August 3, 2010. (Sacramento) board of governors of the Beverly David L. Allen sophomore at Claremont High. Life named to the inaugural publication of U.S. News Media Group’s Best Economics. (Long Beach, CA) her, Cassidy Mei-Zhen (5) and Kiefer Bullivant Houser Bailey PC lawyers In February, I will celebrate the in 2008. (Long Beach, CA) 2005, and have two children with Eric J. Stiff was among several Kristine M. Paden Burdens” to the Journal on International I married Emily Ta in February Eric J. Stiff term as Pottawattamie County 2009 and I’m a full-time mom at the moment. (Alta Loma, CA) Attorney in Council Bluffs, Iowa and became the President of the Iowa County Attorneys Association as well. (Council Bluffs, IA) Stanley A. Boone I returned from a one-year assignment in Washington D.C. as the U.S. Department of Justice’s white collar crime coordinator, to the United States Attorney’s Office here as chief of the Randy S. Wong I continue to work as a real estate developer and won the national facility of the year award, for my 220,000 SF modern I-5 self-storage White Collar Crime Unit. (Fresno, CA) facility in Tustin. I recently covered Marion T. Hack press-credentialed photographer and I recently obtained a $52,100,000 unanimous jury verdict for the City of Victorville in a seven-week trial the Dana Point Concours as a was nationally published in the car industry media. (Newport Beach, CA) that involved a failed power plant project. (Los Angeles, CA) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 39 Christine M. Wright Tim and I will be celebrating our 21st wedding anniversary this year, and the 10th anniversary of our firm 1997 Class Representatives I have been promoted to supervising deputy district attorney for San Bernardino County. – The Wright Law Firm. (Rocklin, CA) Molly J. Mrowka 1996 Gary S. Winuk Daniel Keller June D. Coleman team that won a $7 million Class Representatives Moskowitz Tiedemann & Girard in Jane Greaves Sargent an of counsel capacity. I was also Theresa A. Dunham selected as the first vice president Katherine J. Hart I’ve recently moved to Kronick for the Sacramento County Bar Gordon Bowley Bowley won a defense verdict in Sacramento Superior Court for a company against a plaintiff who Association, and named to the annual Northern California Super Lawyer list for the third year. (Victorville, CA) Keller was a member of a plaintiff’s settlement in U.S. District Court, 1998 Class Representatives Kara L. La Bella-Parker Emily L. Randon Elise S. F. Baker I recently expanded my practice to include Kate Swain, ’05, as Central District of California, against shareholder. (Rocklin, CA) the former IndyMac Bancorp in an Noah G. Blechman ERISA breach of fiduciary case. He is a senior partner in the firm of Keller, Fishback & Jackson LLP. (Tarzana, CA) I won my first two solo jury trials, and our team won all four trials this year. I am now a U.S. District Court mediator for the Northern District. Classmate and fellow partner Peter (Sacramento) John P. McGill driven by one of its employees. He Tad Devlin Devlin won a summary judgment for Builders, Inc, but have returned to achievements. (Martinez, CA) is an associate at Powers & Miller in Sacramento. (Sacramento) the defense in U.S. District Court, Archer Norris as special counsel Joseph W. Carroll claimed to have been hit by an auto Northern District of California, in Michael Macdonald an employment law ERISA disability Macdonald won election as Humboldt County District Attorney in Nevada. The private attorney payment case. He is a partner at Gordon & Rees. (San Francisco, CA) captured 39 percent of the vote in a Christopher Doyle three-way race. Kevin Pasquale, ’84, Doyle has been promoted from finished second. (Winnemucca, NV) associate to of counsel at Jeffer Mangels Butler & Mitchell. A Laura P. Moritz My husband and I are expecting our first child in July 2011. (Haleiwa, HI) Jonathan Renner Renner was appointed to the position of legal affairs secretary by Governor Jerry Brown. He formerly served as a senior assistant litigation attorney, his Sacramento practice focuses on representing financial institutions and defending scrub brush. He is a principal in the Sacramento firm of Thomas Minder & Associates. (Sacramento) for California Community Colleges. I am married with two wonderful little boys. (Sacramento) the 2012 bar. I also recently hired associate Andrew Amara, a La Verne College of Law graduate. (Sacramento) of Meridian Pacific, a political Brian Cassidy consulting firm. (Woodland, CA) I’ve recently participated in the appointed to the Government Relations Committee for the Arizona Bankers Association and have recently had substantial involvement Teresa Bates Walker Department of Corrections in Sacramento Superior Court. She is a state deputy attorney general. (Sacramento) practice in Sacramento – www. lina-law.com. I am also a member of the Sacramento Rescue and Restore Victims of Human Trafficking Coalition – sacramentorescueandrestore.net. (West Sacramento, CA) P a c i f i c L aw as an associate after she takes mayor is the managing partner employment law sexual favoritism and just launched a solo general counsel at the Foundation Supervisors. The former Woodland in government affairs. (Phoenix, AZ) immigration law since graduating, Sacramento, and I am now the of the Yolo County Board of successful defense team in an I have enjoyed practicing I continue to live and work in Rexroad was elected chairman and look forward to her joining me Cassidy has joined the state Department of Corrections as David Cenzano Lina Yen Hughes Vanessa Whang Mott Max Rexroad legal clerk for the past three years for Mutual of Omaha Bank. I was Scion Capital LLC, I joined BTIG as its charge against the California burrito and hit a piece of a wire disputes. (Napa, CA) student, Amanda Brown, as my (Sacramento) Harlan was co-counsel for a Court for a patron who bit into a public and private work construction I have employed current McGeorge completion of bank acquisitions After completing the wind down of (Sacramento) settlement in Sutter Superior contractors and subcontractors in Steven A. Druskin Julie Harlan Saul negotiated an $18,000 where I represent other general Hirsig is slowly catching up with my Janet A. Ryan was the state Attorney General. Jonathan Saul I remain as general counsel to Arntz class actions. (Sacramento) general counsel. (Hillsborough, CA) attorney general when Brown 40 Britt P. Imes Summer 2011 After several years practicing real estate law, I obtained my residential real estate broker’s license. I am currently a broker associate at Village Associates Real Estate, representing buyers and sellers in the Lamorinda, Oakland and Piedmont areas. I live in Orinda with my husband, Henry Walker, ’96, and our three boys. (Orinda, CA) a staff counsel III specialist. Cenzano was the leading vote getter and won a seat on the board of the Hueneme School District. He is a principal in the Law Offices of David A. Cenzano. (Oxnard, CA) G. Lance Coburn Coburn has joined the Greenberg Traurig LLP in its litigation and appellate practices group. Previously, he was a partner at Glaser Weil Fink Jacobs Howard & Shapiro after spending 11 years as an associate and partner at Lionel Sawyer and Collins. (Las Vegas, NV) Peter Hirsig Hirsig won a defense verdict in an auto accident case in San Francisco Superior Court. He is a partner in the firm of McNamara, Ney, Beatty, Slattery, Borges & Brothers. (Fairfield, CA) Ty Moore Moore has joined the California Barnum Steers Clients Through Complexities Of Employment Law Department of Resources Recycling & Recovery as staff counsel. (Sacramento) Bruce Timm Timm spoke on the “Disability Discrimination” at the McGeorge Alumni Association MCLE in By Michael Heenan Sacramento. He had spoken on the same subject a week earlier at the organization’s Southern California MCLE in Long Beach. He is an associate at Boutin Jones Inc. in Sacramento. (Sacramento) Christiana Wilson Darlington I love public law. I have three boys, and a great husband – we celebrated our 10th wedding anniversary this year. Auburn is a great place to raise a family. All is well. (Auburn, CA) Kendra York York was appointed by Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels to head the Indiana Finance Authority as its public finance director. She has served as general counsel and chief operating officer of the agency since mid-2007. (Indianapolis, IN) 1999 Class Representative Kathryn M. Davis Jana DuBois DuBois has been named vice president and general counsel of the California Hospital Association in Sacramento. (Sacramento) Justin Gingery I am now an associate at Dreyer, Babich, Buccola & Wood LLP. (Elk Grove, CA) Jeffrey F. Gorell I was elected as a State Assembly member in 2010. I serve on the Judiciary, Utilities and Commerce, Labor and Employment, Education, and Veteran Affairs committees. (Ventura, CA) For an employer, every day of the week brings a fresh supply of ways to end up in trouble. Every action is subject to a host of federal and state statutes covering fair employment, employee privacy, disability and diversity issues, wages and hours, and health care. And each of those statutes, while similar in theme, comes with a unique and complex roadmap to compliance. “It is the application of [employment] statues and the details that can trip up even the most well-intentioned and thorough, and the fairest of employers,” says Eric Barnum, ’94. “Technicalities you are perhaps not even aware of can land you in hot water… if not with a plaintiff who finds a lawyer making a career of litigating on those technicalities, then with a government agency.” Barnum, a partner and head of labor and employment practice in the Atlanta office of Schiff Hardin, LLP, specializes in filling the gap between what can reasonably be expected from any human resources department and the expertise needed for an employer to stay out of court. Because employment law is about people and their myriad stories, Barnum has more in common with a general litigator than a niche practitioner. A given week’s caseload might involve issues involving trade secrets, harassment, wage and hour practices, or race/ gender class actions. Increasingly, employment law involves questions of the elusive line between employee privacy and an employer’s right or need to know about actions that can cause him harm. Still, even this diverse work doesn’t account for all of Barnum’s time. About half is devoted to general litigation of business disputes on behalf of business clients. The dual roles give him the opportunity to practice law against and alongside the best in the profession. In these high-stakes cases, opponents “tend to have very good lawyers on the other side,” Barnum says. “You’re up against lawyers retained by a class representative in a highprofile action for clients who are looking at significant claims. It really does require you to be at the top of your game.” Barnum is the founder of the McGeorge Black Alumni Association, established in 2002 and the first such group in the school’s history. In the years since, more ethnic affinity associations have been formed for graduates of diverse backgrounds. Involvement outside the office continues today with Barnum. He serves as deputy general counsel for National Bar Association, the oldest organization of African-American attorneys in the country, and is vice chair of the board of directors of the Future Foundation, a nonprofit organization committed to improving the lives of disadvantaged and at-risk youth in the Atlanta area. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 41 2000 Egan J. Gost I am now the Managing General Partner and Chief Operating Officer at Kerber Gost LLC – www. KerberGost.com. (Bakersfield, CA) Teresa McGinity McGinity has joined CalPERS as a staff counsel III. Her previous experience includes work as an employment law attorney at Grancell Lebovitz, et al, in Samantha Tali James S. Overman Lori D. Calvert I am a criminal defense trial attorney. I am on the county indigent defense panel and a Audrey L. Whitehurst Kaplan was the leading vote getter I am now the Deputy Attorney General and won reelection to the Natomas for the state of Hawaii. (Hilo, HI) Unified School District Board. (Sacramento) Elizabeth A. McEnaney-Fell We welcomed our third baby, Julia, in March 2010. (Woodinville, WA) Michael A. Sollazzo I started Harris, Moy, Sollazzo Sacramento. (Sacramento) volunteer for the Gordon D. Rodney R. Moy (Sacramento) alumni, Rodney Moy, ’99, and Don Nathan Edwards (including foreclosure counseling), Schaber Mock Trial Competition. I started Harris, Moy, Sollazzo Law Group LLP with Michael Sollazzo, ’00, and UC Davis alumnus Don Edwards was named one of the top lawyers in Northern Nevada by the Harris, focusing on real estate (including foreclosure counseling), construction, business, tax, and Nevada Business Journal. He is a prosecutor with the Washoe County estate planning. (Vacaville, CA) District Attorney’s Office. (Reno, NV) William V. W. Moore Michael Georgariou Georgariou has been named to I represent individuals and institutions in the disposition and acquisition of residential real estate throughout Northern California – the board of trustees of ARIEL Theatrical, a nonprofit that uses the discipline of the theater to help Mequity Real Estate. (Sacramento) youth. As a private attorney, he Shane Singh law with Amos, Dittrich & Ushana. I have completed three terms as the president of the Greenhaven Soccer Club, a recreational program for 1,400 practices workers’ compensation Risk and Insurance Management Society in New York City in January; the Professional Liability Underwriting Society in Chicago in January 2011, and my daughter’s in June 2011. My daughter graduated from CSUS and has been accepted to USC’s masters/credential program. My son will receive his B.A. in July 2011 and will also be applying March; and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners in Gates LLP, effective March 1, 2011. counseling and litigation, including intellectual property and employment I married Patrick Bridgford Enterprises/Trader Media, which (Sacramento) P a c i f i c L aw Association, he is a shareholder with Herum Crabtree. (Stockton, CA) Summer 2011 Class Representatives Lisa V. Ryan Raijunder Rai-Nielsen Bradley E. Angell This year, we welcomed our first daughter, Riley Angell St. Clair. (Sunnyvale, CA) Chanel R. Brown I am pleased to be teaching at Heald Business College, in addition to running my own practice. I am looking forward to launching my website this spring and eventually expand my practice to include several other key employees. (Sacramento) Douglas Brown M. Ryder Thomas Brown won a $601,000 verdict Thomas has joined MTN Capital Partners as a director in charge transaction origination and an investment banker in the San Francisco office of GCA Savvian where he focused on M&A and private capital transactions for technology companies. MTN invests in companies with sales of $25 to $250 million. (New York City, NY) Thompson has joined Hanson previously practiced at McDonough Holland & Allen. (Sacramento) Elizabeth J. Travis I’ve been working in the state government for over three years, and have found a real marriage between my engineering of directors of the New Mexico State Bar’s California Young Lawyers 2001 (Gold River, CA) Brett Jolley consecutive year. President of the representative for Dominion candidate in a three-way battle. background and my legal career. I Lawyers magazine for the second is the Northern California sales percent garnered by the winning matters. (Palo Alto, CA) Jolley was named a rising star by Super from Lodi on July 4, 2009. He tracks cycle and RV activity. nearly 2,000 lawyers in 37 offices is focused on business-related Zaida Zuraek Bridgford percent of the ballots cast to 49 Bridgett LLP as an associate. He I was named a partner at K & L across three continents. My practice (Sacramento) Assembly District, claiming 46 Michael R. Haven Jessica Thoma Rehabilitation as staff counsel. Pugno lost his race in the 5th Sean-Thomas Thompson K & L Gates is a global law firm with Department of Corrections and Andy Pugno Kansas City in May. (Scottsdale, AZ) to graduate school. (Sacramento) Thoma has joined the California estate planning. (Granite Bay, CA) execution. Previously, he was Erin E. Sullivan-Pico forward to my son’s wedding in construction, business, tax, and Eduard F. Goodman management and privacy for the continues to grow. I’m looking Harris. We focus on real estate of the venture capital firm’s kids in Sacramento. (Sacramento) almost three years, and business Law Group LLP with McGeorge (Salinas, CA) I will be lecturing in data-risk I have had my own law practice for 42 Class Representatives Lisa Kaplan was recently named to the board Women’s Bar Association, beginning 2011. Not a surprise, I guess, given that I was the McGeorge Women’s Caucus President (1999 and 2000), but it is a role I am very excited to add. (Santa Fe, NM) in Washoe County District Court for a tenant counter claimant who claimed that his commercial property landlord breached a lease by allowing another tenant to sell sandwiches. He is a member of the Reno firm of Lemons, Grundy & Eisenberg. (Reno, CA) Jerry Dagrella Dagrella has been elevated to partnership at Best Best & Krieger in Riverside. A litigator, his practice focuses primarily on real estate law. (Riverside, CA) Mario Fenu Fenu received the Ask-A-Lawyer Community Commitment Award from the Legal Aid Center of Southern Nevada for his pro bono service in 2010. He is a principal in the Law Office of Mario Fenu, Ltd. (Las Vegas, NV) Daniel A. Flores I represent people charged with Call to Duty Preempts Call to Public Service For New Assemblyman small to very serious crimes throughout the San Francisco Bay area. In 2009 and 2010, I was recognized as a “Rising Star” in the field of criminal defense by the Northern California Super Lawyers magazine. I recently celebrated my fifth anniversary in private practice. By Steve Kennedy (San Francisco, CA) Sharon A. Garske I am now a deputy attorney general with the Department of Justice. (Benicia, CA) Ryan J. Meckfessel We are happy to announce the arrival of our son, Lex Malosi Meckfessel, and my elevation to partner at Sideman & Bancroft, LLP. (San Francisco, CA) Emma Suarez Pawlicki I am working with Michigan State University School of Natural Resources to recruit students from Puerto Rico to attend the MSU graduate program. Our first recruit started in January – with more to come in September. Plus, I get to travel home. (Redding, CA) 2002 Class Representatives Lan Li Andre Batson Kenneth A. Avelino In 2007, I was the OCA National Convention co-chair. In 2008, I won the OCA National Unsung Hero Award, and in 2010, I won the ABAS President’s Award. (El Dorado Hills, CA) Taras I. Bokshan I am now an attorney/member of Healy & Bokshan LLC. (Bolton, CT) Jeff Gorell was a man on a mission when he decided to run for the California Assembly last year. Only 4 1/2 months after he won election, he went on a different type of mission. Gorell, ’99, elected in November 2010 to represent portions of Ventura, Kern and Los Angeles counties, has the unique distinction of being the 37th Assembly District representative while serving in Afghanistan. The third-generation military man, an intelligence officer and Lieutenant Commander in the Navy Reserves, left in mid-March for a 12-month stint, the first deployment of a statewide-elected California official since World War II. He also served an Afghanistan/Arabian Gulf assignment following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Public service has been in Gorell’s blood since he worked in Governor Pete Wilson’s office. Following that, he attended Pacific McGeorge as an Evening Division student while he was the director of communications for the California Manufacturers and Technology Association. From 1999 to 2006, he was a Ventura County deputy district attorney before turning to private practice. As a private attorney in recent years, he has served as an adjunct professor in politics and public policy at California Lutheran University. “I enjoyed the opportunity of working in and around public policy and learned how rewarding that could be when achieving certain goals,” Gorell says of his writing and deputy press secretary roles on Wilson’s staff. “I always thought someday I was going to return to the Capitol and participate in public policy again.” He just didn’t anticipate an unpaid leave of absence shortly into his two-year term. While he can communicate with staff, constituents and family while in Afghanistan, he cannot vote on legislative matters. Still, he never considered resigning his Assembly seat, which would have resulted in the need for a $1 million special election. So before deployment, Gorell crammed a year’s worth of legislative pursuits into a few months. “I worked really hard to lay a foundation,” he says. “To a certain extent, it will be difficult to notice my absence in many ways.” Gorell earned 89 percent of the primary vote and 58.6 percent of the general vote. He was the only Assembly-seeking Republican endorsed by the California Federation of Labor. Gorell, 40, looks forward to returning once again to the Capitol — and back to his Camarillo home with wife Laura and their two children, Ashley and Jack. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 43 Amelia Burroughs Charles Stone Jennifer Gregory Jessica R. Devencenzi Burroughs was a member of a Stone lost his bid for a seat on Gregory has joined the state Devencenzi was co-counsel for a plaintiffs’ team that won a $50 the Citrus Heights City Council. Department of Justice as a deputy successful defense team in U.S. million settlement from a large An investigator with the state attorney general III. (Sacramento) District Court, Eastern District of nursing home operator in a class- Environmental Protection Agency, action suit in Humboldt Superior he serves with the National Guard Court in a case involving code as an attorney in the Judge enforcement and the Consumer Advocate General Corps. (Citrus Legal Remedies Act. She also was Heights, CA) co-counsel for a successful defense team in a medical malpractice Natalie M. Weber Weber was named of counsel wrongful death case in Siskiyou Superior Court. She is an associate with Janssen, Malloy, Needham, Morrison, Reinholtsen, Crowley & Grieg. (Eureka, CA) Jack Duran, Jr. at Herum Crabtree where she focuses her practice on land use, zoning and environmental issues. (Stockton, CA) The year 2010 brought the birth of my second child and first son, Niko, and my election to partner in the firm. (Granite Bay, CA) Karen L. Turner Turner has joined the California State Lottery as staff counsel. Her previous legal experience included practice as an associate at Livingston & Mattesich. (Sacramento) Supervisor for District 1, Roseville, 2003 California. I won by 15 percentage Class Representatives Brand LLP’s office in Stockton. His Kristin A. Odom practice focuses on all aspects of Shawn M. Krogh construction law, including contract I was elected Placer County points, replacing a long time incumbent politician. I continue to practice federal Indian law at my solo law practice, Duran Law Office. Angelique Ashby (Roseville, CA) Ashby was the subject of a feature Stacy L. Henderson She is a newly elected member story in the Sacramento Bee. Henderson was named a partner at Herum Crabtree. He is a civil of the Sacramento City Council, who will represent the city’s litigator and employment law largest and most populous district specialist. (Stockton, CA) that stretches from Natomas to Scott Hoffman downtown. (Sacramento) Hoffman was named one of the Julie M. Capell top lawyers in Northern Nevada by the Nevada Business Journal. He is a partner with Lewis and Roca. (Reno, NV) Carlo Pedrioli Pedroli wrote an article, “The Rhetoric of Catharsis and Change: Law School Autobiography as a Nonfiction Law and Literature Subgenre,” which appeared in the McGeorge Law Review, Volume 41, Issue 4. He is an assistant professor of law at Barry University. (Orlando, FL) We had our second child, Jade Marie Capell, on February 9, 2010. (Glendale, CA) birthday this year. (Rancho Cordova, CA) bid protests, mechanic’s liens, bond claims and stop practices. (Stockton, CA) 2004 Class Representatives Carolyn Kubish judge advocate as part of a special Hamdaniyah incidents, subsequently Attractive Trade Partner Despite receiving the Navy Commendation Drug-related Violence.” I have Medal for this work. In 2008, I began also written and published a book to prosecute general crimes and Legal Spanish, an International and successfully prosecuted over 100 Domestic Approach. (Sacramento) cases at courts-martial. In 2009, Lindsay Goulding Goulding has been named a shareholder at Porter Scott. (Sacramento) Summer 2011 (Sacramento) Christopher Egan, ’04 Egan has been named a shareholder at Porter Scott. He was also co-counsel for the defense in a wrongful death lawsuit his party settled for waiver of costs, enabling their client to be excluded from a $3 million settlement in Tulare Superior Court. (Sacramento) Sonia R. Fernandes I was awarded the prestigious Jack Berman Award of Achievement for distinguished service to the profession and public by the State Bar of California, California Young Lawyers Association in September 2010. In addition to volunteering with local non-profit organizations, I serve on the board of Sacramento County Bar Association and Women Lawyers of Sacramento. (Sacramento) Neil M.E. Forester In June, I was married to Jennifer the certification exam in family I joined the Marines working as a Business Journal, “Mexico Still accident. He is an associate with state deputy attorney general. Chad C. Brooks arising from the Haditha and in a shopping center parking lot excessive force case. She is a Madison, who is in marketing with in an article in the Sacramento Bryan Elkerton California, in a prisoner’s rights Ryan E. Fillmore administrative/disciplinary actions Pierce & Pierce. (Long Beach, CA) P a c i f i c L aw negotiation, construction claims, On February 4, 2011, I was quoted skateboarding teenager injured celebrating our daughter’s second Weber has made partner at Downey prosecution team to handle any in Ventura Superior Court for a My husband, Raymond, and I are Matthew J. Weber Hector M. de Avila Elkerton won a $25,000 settlement Erica L. Rosasco 44 John G. Roussas I deployed to Iraq where I worked on an international dispute board, receiving the Navy & Marine Corps Stoel Rives, LLP. I plan on taking law in August, for the specialist designation. My involvement with Mira Loma High School speech and debate team continues, and I hope to help grow the English department chapter of CSUS’s Alumni Association over the next few years. (El Dorado Hills, CA) Dylan Frehner Frehner ran for Lincoln County District Attorney, losing by only 67 votes. An Order of the Coif graduate, he is a private attorney in Achievement Medal. I moved to New Nevada. (Pioche, NV) Orleans to serve as senior defense Bryan C. Ginter counsel in January 2011. My wife and I are living happily there with our dog, Charlie. (New Orleans, LA) I am celebrating my second year in practice at Ginter Family Law. The grand opening was 11.1.09. Prior to this, I was employed at other family law firms. (Sacramento) Photography: Steve Yeater Marty Jensen Fernandes Wins Prestigious Award From State Bar Jensen has been named a partner at Porter Scott. He was co-counsel and won a $9 million JAMS arbitration award for the former owner of a Sacramento beer distributorship who was forced to sell his business to a low bidder by a large corporate beer importer. (Sacramento) By Michael Curran Dustin Johnson Johnson took 64 percent of the vote to easily win a full term on the Los Rios Community College District Board. A Sacramento attorney, Johnson had been appointed a trustee in November 2009. (Sacramento) Eunice Majam-Simpson Majam-Simpson joined Nossaman LLP as an associate. She was previously with Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith. (Sacramento) Sandy M. Mendes I am now staff counsel at the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in the office of legal affairs. (Elk Grove, CA) Naoki Sekiya I got married last summer and moved to Los Angeles. (Los Angeles, CA) Thomas M. Swett I’ve recently joined Boutin Jones Inc. of Sacramento in an of counsel capacity and will be practicing general real estate, title and escrow litigation. I will be retaining my current position as project manager for Amador Ranch Associates, a land development company. (Rancho Murieta, CA) In her budding legal career, Sonia Fernandes, ’04, has accomplished much on behalf of vulnerable children and women. She was rewarded for her outstanding work as staff counsel for the California Department of Managed Health Care and wide-ranging community activities with one of the State Bar of California’s most prestigious awards last fall when she was named the recipient of the 2010 Jack Berman Award of Achievement. It was fitting that another Pacific McGeorge alum, Brett Jolley, ’00, president of the California Young Lawyers Association, presented the award to Fernandes at the State Bar convention in Monterey. Fernandes is the first Pacific McGeorge graduate so honored. The award is named for the late Jack Berman, the San Francisco attorney known for his commitment to pro bono legal assistance. “The award has given me an opportunity to reflect upon my decisions and upon the persons and experiences that have influenced them,” Fernandes says. “And I’m truly grateful to all the fabulous mentors I’ve had along the way who have encouraged me to pursue a career in the law.” One of those mentors was Professor John Myers, whose Juvenile Law course she took while in law school. “That class solidified my interests in child-welfare law, and his advice was instrumental in my decision to begin my legal career at Sacramento Child Advocates, Inc., and in my subsequent work,” she says. Fernandes’ accomplishments in her six-year legal career are truly extraordinary. At the Department of Managed Care, she led an investigation into one of California’s largest health plans that resulted in retroactive payments of $470,000 in denied claims and a 2009 settlement involving a $2.5 million penalty. The case involved the improper denial of a diagnostic test and tool used to guide treatment of patients with breast cancer. In the community, her work to protect women and children spans multiple organizations and projects. As a board member of Women Lawyers of Sacramento, she played a major role in creating the WLS Ad Hoc Child Protection Committee and has chaired it since its inception in 2008. Fernandes focused the committee on raising awareness of troubling issues within the Sacramento County Child Protection Services and on providing more aid to children in the foster care system. She also is active in My Sister’s House, Operation Protect and Defend, the Asian-Pacific Bar Association and the South Asian Bar Associations. And she finds time to mentor law students at Pacific McGeorge on the importance of – yes, public service. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 45 2005 Class Representatives Sarah M. Lightbody Michal Meciar Brian T. Manning Richard Sutherland Matthew L. Gouaux I have been named partner at Sutherland joined Nossaman LLP In December 2010, I was appointed the Desmond, Nolan, Livaich & in Sacramento as an associate. He to the board of directors for the Cunningham law firm — www. formerly practiced with Cappello Barristers Club of the San Francisco dnlc.net. I am working in eminent & Noel LLP in Santa Barbara. Bar Association. I also serve as domain/inverse condemnation, (Sacramento) President of the San Francisco land use and real property law. I Jennifer Alves I got married to Matthew Toepel on am married with two daughters. I gave birth to my second son, Chapter of NIPA (National Institute of Pension Administrators). In August 21, 2010, at St. Francis of (Sacramento) Assisi Church and had my reception John Moffatt 2010. Hayden and his 16 month-old Moffatt was appointed to the brother, Colton James, have kept Central Valley Flood Protection me very busy trying to balance my James Maynard Commission by outgoing Governor full-time law career with my family Maynard has joined Cota Cole LLP Arnold Schwarzenegger. He life! (San Jose, CA) in Roseville where he will specialize at the California Automobile Museum. We have settled into our new home. (West Sacramento, CA) Chris Brooke Brooke won election as the District Attorney of Moduc County. He has previously served as the governor’s chief deputy legal affairs secretary. Hayden Cooper Sweatt, in December Nicholas Zovko I was named partner in the law firm my spare time, I enjoy biking and playing with my two sons, Carter and Colin. (El Cerrito, CA) in public entity advice, counsel, and litigation and administrative served as an assistant district (Lodi, CA) attorney in the county seat for the Nancy S. Pheng LLP. They have over 260 lawyers I married Nicholas Street on June nationwide, and dedicate their 28, 2008. We welcomed our first practice to all aspects of intellectual son, Colson Street, in March 2009, property law. I focus my practice on and are expecting our second patent litigation with an emphasis child, a daughter, in April 2011. on mechanical and medical devices, with Wilke, Fleury, Hoffelt, Gould & (Sacramento) and work in the firm’s Irvine and Greg Maroni Birney. (Sacramento) Robert A. Plagmann Riverside offices. (Irvine, CA) Maroni was featured in a New Matthew P. Digesti I graduated from the Marine Corps past five years. (Alturas, CA) Craig Carnes Carnes has joined Stoel Rives LLP as an associate in its Sacramento office. Previously, he practiced Expeditionary Warfare School Larry and I are approaching our with honors and was awarded the third year in practice together, enjoying several successes in cases ranging from representation of Defense Meritorious Service Medal for service in OIF. I got married on Reno’s Firefighters Union to claims March 19, 2011. (Chesapeake, VA) for personal injuries. Our father/son Brian Plummer team remains active with the state bar, as members of the board of governors and the young lawyer’s executive committee. (Reno, NV) Plummer won a defense verdict in Amador Superior Court for a case in which injured plaintiffs claimed Union Pacific Railroad was at fault when their automobile was struck Carolyn L. Katzorke Big sisters Kaylen and Hailey are excited to meet their new baby by a train at a railroad crossing. He is a trial counsel for the huge of Knobbe, Martens, Olsen & Bear, Channone Marie Smith Tyler J. Barrett I recently accepted an offer to become a non-equity partner at the I.P. boutique firm of Loza and Loza. greater Sacramento area. My Rafael Ruano practice has an emphasis on DUI, domestic violence, restraining orders, marital dissolution, child custody and child support issues. (Folsom, CA) agent, he runs California Sports that operates a baseball training facility in the Caribbean country. (Sacramento) Matthew K. J. Ninke In July 2010, I left government practice in Southern California and December 2010, I negotiated Castillo has joined the Fair Political Practices Commission as legal Collins has joined Lozano Smith in Sacramento as an associate. Previously, she was a litigation attorney at Thurbon & McHaney. (Gold River, CA) to start a private practice. In a professional medical services contract for nearly $800,000 over three years. (Jackson, CA) Coby T. Page I am pleased to announce the formation of Page Law Group, LLC. The firm’s main practice areas include criminal defense, general litigation, bankruptcy, business I was promoted to chief formation and simple estate administrative officer of Goyette and planning. I am also pleased to Associates, a fast growing labor announce the pending birth of our and employment firm based in Gold third child in May 2011. A girl would River. At home, we are busy with be most welcome after two boys. three energetic boys, Nati (4½), (Peoria, AZ) Lucas (3) and Nicholas (6 months). (Carmichael, CA) P a c i f i c L aw the Dominican Republic. A sports Bridgette P. Castillo Anne M. Collins LLP. (Sacramento) (Roseville, CA) returned to Northern California Derek J. King family law clients throughout the Arbitration Certification Program. (Kaysville, UT) Rose has joined the construction Fahrendorf, Vilorio, Oliphant & Oster of Behavioral Sciences, and the Management in Sacramento Richard N. Asfar counsel. (Sacramento) to represent criminal defense and Athletic Commission, the Board Class Representatives Jason Rose Sacramento. He was previously with Affairs as general counsel to the 2006 (Sacramento) in a solo private practice. I continue state Department of Consumer who back baseball academies in company. (Roseville, CA) litigation practice of Archer Norris in law. Previously, he was with the York Times article about investors brother, due to arrive this spring. I am now celebrating over two years 46 Dawn C. Sweatt Summer 2011 Glenn N. Powell Jared Hague Melissa A. Brown Alison R. Terry I retired from the Sheriff’s Hague was co-counsel for a plaintiff On January 3, 2011, I proudly In November 2010, I joined Department on August 27, 2010. in U.S. District Court, Eastern watched as my husband, Kelly Lewis Brisbois’ products liability Now I spend my days in music and District of California, who won a Brown, ’95, was sworn in as District group. I also serve as co-chair of language studies! (Sacramento) $16,800 verdict for a violation of the Attorney for White Pine County. One California Women Lawyers Judicial family medical leave act. He is an month later, I left the offices of the Committee, having just completed associate at Dutton, Hatmaker Law Nevada State Public Defender. I a term as CWL’s 5th District Corporation in Fresno. (Fresno, CA) am excited for new opportunities in representative on the Board of 2011. (Ely, NV) Governors. (Los Angeles, CA) Matthew Silver Silver was co-counsel for the city of Fontana, which won a code violation illegal operation complaint in San Audrey Khoo Bernardino Superior Court against Khoo was co-counsel for a plaintiff Louise K. Fulsher Ryan Zinchefsky a sports bar that was running a who won a $2.5 million bench I was recently hired by Doll Amir Zinchefsky is currently serving as “13 and over teen night.” He is an decision in a Los Angeles Superior & Eley LLP in Los Angeles, as an chief legal counsel to the Senate in associate at Best Best & Kreiger. Court case involving breach of associate attorney practicing in the Palau. (Koror, Palau) (Irvine, CA) contract in a sales transaction. She area of general business litigation, is an associate with Chang & Cobb with particular focus on intellectual LLP in Rowland Heights. (Rowland property matters and entertainment Heights, CA) law. (Los Angeles, CA) department of the SEIU local in Pamela Marsh David C. Garner Sacramento. I am also a freelance Marsh has joined the California In December 2010, I was selected translator for Lingua-World, State Board of Equalization as a tax as vice-mayor of Gridley. At Cologne, Germany. (Sacramento) counsel. (Sacramento) the beginning of 2010, I began Daniel Zaprianov I am working as a proof reader/ secretary for the contracts 2007 Class Representatives Carl R. Wilander I am an attorney at Wilkes & McHugh PA. (Tampa FL) Class Representatives teaching business law courses at Butte College. (Gridley, CA) I am now the Assistant Director/ Richard C. Alpers Class Representatives I’m over one year into a thriving Kimberly L. Kakavas Kevin R. Greenleaf plaintiff oriented practice. I have John P. Oglesby tried several cases to verdict and look forward to continuing to build the statewide presence of the firm with fellow McGeorge alum partners, John Ramirez, ’00, and David Nitka, ’07. (Hermosa Beach, CA) Adam Ambrozy Ambrozy was co-counsel for a plaintiff who reached a $750,000 settlement in Contra Costa Superior Christie was the subject of a feature Sanitary District truck. Ambrozy, story in the Grass Valley Union. She who represented the district, is is a Nevada City family law lawyer an associate with Lenahan Lee who also teaches at Sierra College Slater & Pearse in Sacramento. and the California Paralegal College. (Sacramento) Kathryn E. Ankeny Regina A. Garza In March 2010, I was awarded My husband, Justin, and I welcomed ‘Misdemeanor Prosecutor of the our first child, Joaquin Thomas Year (Southwest Division),’ and in Garza, on December 27, 2010. I June was promoted to the Superior am an associate at Lozano Smith Court. I will be getting married to and specialize in municipal and Bryan Schmitz on March 5, 2011. education law. (Fowler, CA) (Mission Viejo, CA) My husband, Andy, ’04, and I had a baby girl, Avery Elizabeth, on August 26, 2010. (El Dorado Hills, CA) for my client (after almost 29 years). A Lawful Permanent Resident Card is commonly known as a ‘Green Card’ for foreign nationals. I am so As of the beginning of this year, I am serving as legal advisor at the Greenleaf, on July 5, 2010. In between practicing patent law, I help my wife with our small farm, which has livestock and a garden. Public Employment Relations Board. (Sacramento) Alan Donato Donato was featured in his role as an assistant baseball coach at Klotsche has joined Hanson Bridgett LLP as an associate. He previously practiced at McDonough Holland & Allen. (Sacramento) McClatchy High and youth mentor in an article in the Valley Community News. A sole practitioner, he operates the Law Office of Alan J. Donato. (Sacramento) Christina A. Morkner-Brown I recently joined the office of legal affairs as staff counsel at California Air Resources Board, working on various regulatory matters, including implementation of the Global Warming Solutions Act AB32. (Fair Oaks, CA) Daniel H. Drummy I married Ashley Nicole Conner on August 8, 2009. (Pasadena, CA) Justin S. Freeborn I am a staff attorney for Legal Services of California. My work and clients were featured in The Wall Street Journal (“Overpaid Claudia Nagy Nagy has joined the California Air Resources Control Board as staff counsel. (Sacramento) I have my own practice, The Miranda R. Carroll second child, Jarrett Anthony John Klotsche Inderjit S. Ahluwalia excited. (San Jose, CA) My family and I welcomed our injured in an auto accident while driving a Contra Costa Central Nora E. Hall CA) (Lovettsville, VA) Nancy T. Christie (Nevada City, CA) services at UC San Diego. (Tustin, Court in a case involving who was Andrew O. Meditz obtain a lawful permanent residency Paula Gluzman 2008 Michelle Laidlaw Sandeep S. Vishwa Ahluwalia Firm. I have been able to Counseling Attorney of student legal Amyann Rupp 2009 Pensions Being Seized” – 8.13.10) and Orange County Register (“That Pension, You May Have to Pay It Back” – 8.27.10). I was quoted in both. (Sacramento) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 47 Heidi S. Holmquist Brian K. Wanerman Christine A. Elliott Alec Levine I am a deputy public defender at I was sworn in as an active member I am working in the workers’ rights Levine wrote a comment, “Play Humboldt County Public Defender’s of the State Bar of California on unit at Neighborhood Legal Services Harms: Liability and the Play Office. (Ferndale, CA) December 12, 2010. (Sacramento) in the Los Angeles area, through Conceit in Virtual Worlds,” which the McGeorge public sector stipend appears in the McGeorge Law program. We serve low-wage Review, Volume 41, Issue 4. workers in matters such as wage He passed the State Bar of and hour violations, retaliation and California July 2010 examination. other labor and employment law (Sacramento) Yury A. Kolesnikov Rebecca M. Wilkins I finished my district court clerkship I am an associate attorney at with the Honorable Irma E. Gonzalez Lerandeau & Lerandeau LLP. In in August 2010. After a short 2010, I received the Fresno County trip to Yosemite National Park, I Bar Association Pro Bono Attorney started my new clerkship with the of the Year Award. (Clovis, CA) Jeremy Merz Honorable David R. Thompson on Rebekah Grodsky Merz has joined Downey Brand in the Court of Appeals for the Ninth 2010 Rebekah has joined the office of its litigation practice group. While the Assistant Dean for Student in law school, he was an extern for Affairs at Pacific McGeorge as U.S. District Judge Frank Damrell Class Representatives its student services counselor, Jr., Eastern District of California. providing academic counseling to (Sacramento) Circuit. (San Diego, CA) Amber Rose Maltbie Maltbie wrote a comment, “When the Veil and the Vote Collide: Enhancing Muslim Women’s Rights Through Electoral Reform,” which appeared in the McGeorge Law Review, Volume 41, Issue 4. She is an attorney in Sacramento. Catherine Mattesich Jillian Brown students as well as serving as the Beatriz Berumen the SBA and student organizations. Berumen has joined Porter Scott as a new associate. (Sacramento) Tiffany Corona (Sacramento) Corona wrote a comment, “A Public Christopher J. Moenig Safety Approach: Reconciling In January, I joined forces with a seasoned litigator, Kevin Hughey, ’98, to form Hughey Moenig LLP. Although Hughey Moenig offers Terry with Individual Rights,” which appears in the McGeorge Law Review, Volume 41, Issue 4. She has joined Lenahan, Lee, a variety of legal services, my Slater & Pearse as an associate. engineering and construction (Sacramento) experience provides immediate expertise in the area of construction litigation. The practice and contact information can be found at www. Tami V. Castillo I was proud to join the firm of Considine, Sorensen & Trujillo, liaison between the administration, (Sacramento) Will Jackson Jackson has joined Porter Scott as a new associate. (Sacramento) I was hired as staff counsel for the California State Office of Administrative Law in August 2010. Senator Tom Harman. (Sacramento) extern for Justice Ronald Robie at the Third District Court of Appeal. (Sacramento) Laura K. Lachman I am an associate attorney at Harbinson Tune Kasselik in San customer. He is an associate with the Law Offices of Richard C.J. in Schwarzenegger v. Entertainment Merchants Assoc. The case was on heard it back in October 2008 in a Trujillo, who also worked in the with the Law Offices of Hadley and special sitting at Pacific McGeorge. immigration clinic. (Sacramento) Fraulob, a Social Security disability He is a deputy attorney general for firm, to start in mid-February. My the state of California. (Sacramento) research assistant at the law firm. (Sacramento) Michael Christensen Christensen has joined Porter Scott as a new associate. (Sacramento) Wahng in Fremont. (Fremont,CA) work with Disability Rights California as a law clerk, including the last couple months on the McGeorge stipend program, helped prepare me for this position. (Sacramento) Lauren D. Layne I am an associate at Baker Manock & Jensen. We welcomed the birth of our son, Wesley John Layne, on October 16, 2010. He was 8 pounds, 1 ounce Mai To Trieu and 20 ¾” long. Sandy and I are very I am a deputy district attorney for Santa proud parents and enjoying our time Barbara County. (Rosemead, CA) with our baby boy. (Fresno, CA) P a c i f i c L aw Supreme Court of the United States appeal from the Ninth Circuit, which an associate. She was previously a charged with sexual assault by a Morazzini argued before the I’ve accepted an attorney position Cho has joined Stoel Rives LLP as health spa whose masseuse was Zackery Morazzini ’02 immigration law clinic, and Griselda Lee Sheldon in Alameda Superior Court of a Research Corporation. (Fremont, CA) PUBLIC LAW & POLICY Jared Laiti Juliet Cho successful negligent hiring defense I am a law clerk with the LAM LL.M. M. Considine, ’86, who led the (Elk Grove, CA) Sheldon was co-counsel in the Thomas has been hired by the Civil coordinated legislation for state Matthew S. Lanza Eric J. Partington Derrick Thomas While in law school, she was an Francisco. (Belvedere, CA) adjunct professors: Michael HI) legislative associate. He previously passionate and dedicated attorneys Circuit Court of Appeals. (Reno, NV) Alm, ’83, on the Islands. (Honolulu, Brand in its litigation practice group. Preston L. Morgan our office are two former McGeorge District of Hawaii, Judge Steven Justice Association of California as a immigrant community, alongside Procter R. Hug, Jr. on the U.S. Ninth I am clerking for U.S. District Court, Katie Konz has joined Downey where I can work serving the and staff. Among the partners at Cheryl Shitabata Katie Konz hugheymoenig.com. (Sacramento) I am a law clerk to the Honorable 48 issues. (Claremont, CA) Summer 2011 LL.M. John Verbeck Patrick Furrer, ’71 many L.A. County Bar committees My revised thesis article, Patrick died on October 16, 2010, and charitable organizations, she was TAXATION “International Arbitration Practice in of lung cancer at the age of 68 a long-time member of the McGeorge Europe: Anti-Suit Injunctions,” has in Tigard, Oregon. He operated a Alumni Association board of directors. Robert Brumfield III ’85 been published in The Yearbook on general practice with an emphasis She also established the Diana P. Brumfield has opened his own International Arbitration, a Vienna- on probate, trusts and real property Scott Scholarship that is awarded firm, the Law Offices of Robert H. based periodical. Last summer, I for 39 years in that Portland suburb. annually to the four students who Brumfield, P.C. A business litigation completed a summer consultancy Active in the Tigard community, he compete in the intramural moot court specialist, he was previously with with the AV-rated firm of Herbert, was a former president of the Tigard competition. Kronick, Moskovitz, Tiedemann & Herbert, and Pack. (Vienna, Austria) Chamber of Commerce. Boris Utnasunov Betty Muegge, ’75 Lisbeth died on October 8, 2010, at I have started working and joined Betty died on January 13, 2011, the age of 55 in Sequim, Washington. DLA Piper law firm in Moscow as a after a long battle with cancer at the She practiced appellate law for more lawyer of corporate group. So, now age of 76 in Roseville. A family law than 25 years with various California I have a source of money to visit and estate planning attorney for 35 state agencies in Sacramento California. (Moscow, Russia) years, she was active in the Placer and San Francisco, including the SPCA and once wrote a book, Who’ll Legislative Counsel, Attorney General, Get The Pets, combining her legal and CalTrans, before retiring to IN MEMORIAM expertise with a love of animals. Washington state in 2007. The University of the Pacific Thomas Russell, ’77 Paul Hickman, ’84 Thomas died on January 10, 2011, Paul died on October 21, 2010, at in a plane crash in Guatemala at the age of 66 in Reno after being the age of 62. He was a retired hospitalized following a medically circuit judge of the Illinois 7th Judicial related traffic accident days earlier. Court in Jerseyville, Illinois. A A long-time Reno Municipal Court Stanford graduate who was raised judge, a 1978 auto accident had in California, Russell earned a left him wheelchair-bound before he Diploma in Comparative Law from decided to attend McGeorge in the McGeorge’s fall program in Salzburg early 1980’s. Prior to his appointment in addition to his J.D. degree. He as a judge, he served as an assistant served on the bench in southwestern Reno city attorney. He remained Girard. His wife, Lorna Brumfield, ’83, is a judge on the Kern County Superior Court. (Bakersfield, CA) LL.M. TRANSNATIONAL BUSINESS PRACTICE Janiece Marshall ’90 McGeorge School of Law expresses Marshall was sworn in as a justice of the sympathy to the families and friends peace on the Las Vegas Justice Court, of the following law school alumni: to which she was elected in November. The former partner at Lewis, Brisbois, Bisgaard & Smith most recently practiced at Anderson McPharlin & Conners LLP. (Las Vegas, NV) Harold D. Winingar, ’59 Harold died on July 6, 2009, at age 80 in Euless, Texas. He was a consultant in admiralty law matters for many years in the Sacramento Lisbeth Bellet, ’80 Keith Pershall ’95 area. Later, he captained a Pershall spoke on “Selected whale – watching boat out of Santa Issues in International Law” at the Barbara for Rachel G Cruises in his McGeorge Alumni Association MCLE retirement. Illinois for more than 25 years before on the November general election Francis J. Quinn, ’61 retiring, in part to serve volunteer ballot unopposed, as he had been the organizations in Guatemala where he previous four elections. in Sacramento. He had spoken on the same subject a week earlier at the organization’s Southern California MCLE in Long Beach. He is a principal in the Law Offices of Keith E. Pershall. (Sacramento) Francis died on December 28, 2010, at the age of 81 of natural causes in Escondido. He worked for many years as a claims adjustment manager for the Sacramento maintained a second home. Grant Pegg, ’89 Carl G. Knopke, Jr., ’78 Grant died on October 5, 2010, Carl died on October 16, 2010, at suddenly at the age of 47. He the age of 66 while hiking near Mt. practiced law for two decades and Lassen. The Sacramento attorney was a principal in the Law Offices of began his career with the State Grant D. Pegg in Sacramento. His Franchise Tax Board, later opening father, Joel Pegg, ’63, had died of his own tax and probate practice cancer on August 1, 2010. Hilmar Kroat-Reder ’96 office of Civil Service Employees Kroat-Reder has joined the Petrom Insurance Company, which later board of directors and will oversee the became a part of GEICO. He retired company’s gas and energy operations. in 1988 and moved to Truckee, Romania’s largest corporation, OMV/ later relocating to Escondido. where he worked until his death. A Manuel E. Lopes, ’69 Planning Council, he was active in Petrom is the biggest gas and oil producer in Eastern Europe. He has been with the company since 2002. (Bucharest, Romania) Manuel died on February 12, 2011, of pneumonia at age 84 in Citrus Heights. A World War II veteran Thomas Thorup ’09 and former Sacramento City Police After three interesting years with sergeant, he practiced law for many Martensen Wright PC in California, years as a Sacramento County I will relocate to Denmark and deputy counsel. start my own law firm, ScanAm Legal. I have enjoyed working with McGeorge people over the years and I hope to continue doing so in member of the Sacramento Estate numerous community organizations. Daniel Folt, ’92 Daniel died on November 8, 2010, at the age of 53 of melanoma in Wilmington, Delaware. Valedictorian of Diana P. Scott, ’78 the Class of 1992 Evening Division, Diana died on October 30, 2010, at the former Sacramento police officer the age of 58 in Beverly Hills after a was a partner at Duane Morris LLP long battle with cancer. A partner at where he focused on corporate Greenberg Traurig, she was chair of securities and financial services law. the firm’s Los Angeles employment He began his legal career as a clerk law group and past chair of the firm’s for a Delaware Supreme Court justice national labor practice. Active on and also practiced with Pepper Hamilton and Cozen O’Connor. the future. (Copenhagen, Denmark) Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 49 University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law HONOR ROLL OF DONORS The following lists recognize individuals and organizations that have made current gifts, pledges and estate or planned gifts to Pacific McGeorge in excess of $20,000. LIFETIME INVESTORS Individuals $1,000,000+ Dona K. Buckingham Richard Stack $500,000+ Francis B. Dillon Hayne R. & Susan Moyer $250,000+ James & Dorothy Adams John Brownston Raymond Burr Thomas J. Feeney Roberta & Carl Kierney Betty Knudson Enlow & Melena Ose Gordon D. Schaber John Stauffer Angelo K. Tsakopoulos Anonymous Rosalie S. Asher Irving H. & Katharine O. Biele Robert F. Butler Sam Gordon Kathleene Henderson Pamela Henderson Genshiro Kawamoto Daniel D. Richard, Jr. $50,000+ Daniel E. Angius Gilles S. Attia Thomas & Suzanne Bales Michael D. Belote Robert A. Buccola Benjamin D. Frantz Sherrill Halbert Kenneth & Linda Olson Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker & Robert A. Parker Anthony J. Scalora Elvin F. & Pauline C. Sheehy Scott S. Slater Robert & Doris Stark Edward H. Telfeyan P a c i f i c L aw $20,000+ Walter & Janet Alexander David & Lexis Allen Fred Anderson Anonymous Leighton D. Armstrong David & Carol Cairns Glenn A. Fait Doris Gross Ben E. Johnson Ken & Bonnie Jean Kwong Albert J. & Mae Lee James R. Lewis Thomas J. Long John R. Masterman Timothy & Linda Naccarato Gregory Ogrod Claude & Lynn Rohwer Hardie G. Setzer Thadd A. Blizzard Edgar A. Boyles, Jr. Samuel Chicos Frank J. Christy, Jr. K. C. Fan Richard A. Harris Mark Hefner Pauline Johnson Warren A. Jones David J. Kristianson R. Marilyn Lee & Harvey A. Schneider David P. Mastagni Perry Potiris Robert L. Roush Elaine & Edward Samans Tom Sinetos Philip H. Wile $25,000+ $100,000+ 50 $35,000+ Timothy F. Cahill & Laurel V. Bell-Cahill Katharine O. Biele Howze John Q. Brown Charles B. & Kathleen T. Coyne Helen Harney Crittenden Loren S. Dahl Noël M. Ferris Anna Rose Fischer Morton L. & Marcy Friedman Emil Gumpert Michael A. Hackard William D. & Joy F. Harn Daniel L. Hitzke Anthony M. Kennedy Frank LaBella, Jr. Brian K. & Dorothy S. Landsberg Eugene W. McGeorge C. Roman Rector Marc & Mona Roberts Annie M. Rogaski Donald & Dorothy Steed Edward J. Tiedemann Charles W. Trainor Sunny Von Bulow R. Parker White Daniel E. Wilcoxen Alba Witkin Bernard E. Witkin Summer 2011 The Sacramento Bee Sacramento Region Community Foundation $50,000+ The Dana Foundation Downey Brand Attorneys, LLP Dreyer, Babich, Buccola & Callaham, LLP Hefner, Stark & Marois, LLP Red River Shipping Corporation Alfred P. Sloan Foundation The Telfeyan Evangelical Fund, Inc. E.L. Weigand Foundation $35,000+ Corporations/Organizations California NBR Settlement Fund Carpenters Local Union 586 Kaweah Lemon Company Kronick, Moskovitz, Tiedemann & Girard $1,000,000+ $25,000+ The Hugh & Hazel Darling Foundation The Max C. Fleischmann Foundation $500,000+ Arata Bros. Trust The Fletcher Jones Foundation $250,000+ The James Irvine Foundation Sacramento Estate Planning Council George H. Sandy Foundation The Sierra Health Foundation $100,000+ The Ahmanson Foundation Anonymous C.L.E.P.R. E.L. Cord Foundation Margaret Deterding Fund Gannett Foundation Mr. & Mrs. William D. James Foundation John A. McCarthy Foundation Public Legal Service Society American Association of Retired Persons Medpac Sierra Oaks Mortgage University of Phoenix Foundation US Bank $20,000+ Brian L. Hintz Memorial Golf Tournament McDonough, Holland & Allen, PC Pfund Family Foundation William C-B Foundation University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law HONOR ROLL OF DONORS The following lists recognize individuals and organizations that have made gifts to Pacific McGeorge during the 2010 calendar year. Dean’s Council Counselor ($25,000+) Thomas J. Feeney**** Kathleen C. Henderson Pamela M. Henderson Shareholder ($10,000+) Jonathan R. Hayes Scott S. Slater** Cabinet Member ($7,500+) Michael D. Belote* Patron ($5,000+) Daniel E. Angius*** Thomas R. Bales, DDS* Katharine O. Biele Robert A. Buccola* Brian K. Landsberg** Dorothy S. Landsberg** Hayne & Susan Moyer**** Timothy E. Naccarato* Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker* Robert A. Parker* Arthur G. Scotland* Advocate ($2,500+) Bruce T. Beesley John Q. Brown**** Anthony J. Caruso Joy F. Harn* William Davis Harn* Stephen R. Holden* James R. Lewis**** C. Emmett Mahle John R. Masterman** Gustavo E. Matheus Steven A. Merksamer* Ann Morgan Gregory Ogrod** W. Ronald Redmond, DDS, MS Walter Robb Malcolm S. Swift Michael Van Zandt Thomas J. Welsh* Alfred E. Yudes, Jr.** Member (various levels) David W. Abbott*** John H. Adams Inderjit S. Ahluwalia Bashar Ahmad Walter & Janet Alexander, Jr.* *5+ years of membership ****20+ years of membership David Allen**** Lexis M. Allen** Ronald D. Alling David F. Anderson* William G. Anderson, Jr. Anonymous Brenna Arceo Asukwo M. Archibong Jeffery L. Arnold Richard N. Asfar* Gilles S. Attia* Fareena Siddiqui Azhar Chad T. Bacchus Christo D. Bardis Eric L. Barnum** Adam Barrett* William C. Bartels* Mark D. Becker* Charles H. Bell, Jr. Laurel V. Bell-Cahill** Anthony D. Bento Clifford P. Berg* Andrew S. Bernick Steven A. Block** Teri Block* Ronald E. Blubaugh** D. Kirkwood & Laura C. Bowman Jennie L. Bretschneider Chad C. Brooks Jillian E. Brown Natalie S. Bustamante Ileana Butu Timothy F. Cahill** Kara Rosenberg Cain Connie M. Callahan* Clay Calvert Scott N. Cameron* Gerald M. & Deborah B. Caplan*** Zelia M. Cebreros* Carlos A. Chavarria, Jr. Alberta C. Chew* Louise L. Chiu*** Frank J. Christy, Jr.* Thomas R. Clark J. Mitchell Cobeaga Raymond R. Coletta* Robert J. Corkern John L. Cosgrove, Sr. Charles B. & Kathleen T. Coyne*** Carissa K. Crail Andrew M. Cummings **10+ years of membership Walter R. Dahl* Julie A. Davies & Thomas A. Busch* James M. Day, Jr.* Dirk A. Daza Hector M. de Avila Gonzalez* Mallory E. DeLauro Nirav K. Desai* Benjamin Diaz Richard K. Dickson, II* Hilary A. Dinkelspiel Daniel S. Dokos Matthew P. Downs John F. Doyle Cody A. Drabble Joanna Duenas Larry K. Dunn Erin M. Dunston Sean A. Dunston Jason P. Ebert* Olena Eckert Mona Halprin Ehrenreich Robert M. Ehrenreich Theresa R. Esquerra Melissa A. Faber Anne C. Fadenrecht Gail R. Fadenrecht* Glenn A. Fait*** Casandra J. Fernandez Noël M. Ferris** Michele M. Finerty* L. Kalei Fong Kurt A. Franke Rex D. Frazier Morton L. Friedman Dayna M. Gariby Donald G. Gensler Faith Geoghegan** Joseph C. George, Sr. Randolph H. Getz* Heather E. Gibbons Richard K. Gilbert Kimber B. Goddard Barbara L. Goldberg* Candy Dahl Goldman Thomas H. Gourlay, Jr.* Harry K. Grafe Carly A. Gregory Rebekah L. Grodsky Evelyn A. Grosenick Ray D. Hacke J. Michelle Hahn* Roger G. Halfhide* ***15+ years of membership Alex S. Harary Sheila A. Hard Jenni L. Harmon Judith A. Harper Bryan C. Hartnell** Tyler V. Heath Brian J. Heffernan Jennifer A. Hemmer* Kevin T. Hennessy* Megan E. Herberger Scott M. Hervey Allysia D. Holland David S. Horiuchi Lori A. Hunt Carol J. Hunter* David R. Isola Lisa F. Isola H. Vincent Jacobs* Jessica Jagir Mark S. Jennings Dustin D. Johnson* Mark R. Johnson Warren A. Jones**** Kimberly L. Kakavas Joel E. Kautz Debra J. Kazanjian* Larry M. Kazanjian Christian M. Keiner** Charles D. Kelso**** Randall E. Kessler* C. Daniel Kim Daniel A. King Lydia V. Ko Yury A. Kolesnikov Katie Konz Michelle L. Kral David J. Kristjanson**** Fern M. Laethem* David M. Lambertson* David R. Lane* Shawnee S. Lane Marsha M. Lang* Gayle J. Lau** Lauren D. Layne Courtney G. Lee R. Marilyn Lee** Anthony L. Leggio* Nubia Lemus May Ling Leong Lawrence C. Levine** Elisa A. & Michael Levy Darrin Lim Adam D. Link Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 51 Timothy J. Long James L. Lopes* Donna W. Low Robert C. MacKichan Catherine C. MacMillan* Thomas O. Main* Tricia L. Manning Patricia S. Mar Roberto Marquez Katharine A. Martin Lilka B. Martinez David P. Mastagni** Charlene Stratton Matteson* Evelyn M. Matteucci* Charlene A. Mattison* Stephen C. McCaffrey** Douglas W. McGeorge** Mary C. McGuire Patricia A. McVerry* Andrew O. Meditz Lee E. Meisner Brian J. Miller Donald J. Miller Mike S. Mireles, Jr. James M. Mize**** Connor A. Mocsny Christopher J. Moenig Andrea S. Moon Barbara D. Morris Jared S. Mueller John B. Mulligan Suzanne Murphy Alice J. Murray Robert D. Murta Marie A. Nakamura* Vigo G. Nielsen Jarrett C. Noble Blake C. Nordahl John A. Norwood* Ramon E. Nunez Robert E. Oakes* George F. Ogilvie, III Dennis J. Olmstead Matthew J. Olson Marty Evenson Opich & Richard Opich* Sandra Price Otellini Ovidio Oviedo Benjamin J. Packard Kelsey E. Papst Geralynn Patellaro* Paul D. Paton Jeffrey N. Paule* Joseph M. Penney Ingrid K. Petersen Patricia Ellis Poilé* Luke N. Pollock Jeannette Powell Zachary B. Powell Wayne C. Raabe William E. Rainey, III David J. Ramirez 52 P a c i f i c L aw Joel D. Rapaport Mark C. Raskoff Nancy B. Reardan* Andrew B. Reisinger Paul K. Richardson Bernard Richter* Ronald B. Robie* Christopher L. Russell* Ronald M. Sabraw Brian J. Sacks* Sayfe A. Salem James P. Sammut Brian J. Schall Diana L. Schall Bruce A. Scheidt* Cheryl M. Shitabata Michael I. Sidley* Craig A. Simmermon John C. Sims** Christopher A. Skelton Anthony & Patricia Skrocki** Sheila J. Slaughter Dey Morgan C. Smith* R. Michael Smith* Michael A. Sollazzo* John G. Sprankling* William J. Staack Howard J. Stagg, IV* Samuel G. Stamas Margaret C. Stark-Roberts* C. M. Starr, II Donald & Dorothy Steed**** Kara B. Stein Colette Stone Carlson Chris Sullivan Megan R. Sullivan Mary L. Swanson Dawn C. Houston Sweatt Edward H. Telfeyan**** Alexandra S. Thomas Barbara Thomas** Kelly O’Rourke Thomas Conness A. Thompson Edward J. Tiedemann**** Charles W. Trainor*** Ann L. Trowbridge Winfried van den Muijsenbergh Colleen Van Egmond-Avila Sarah M. Van Slyke Michael Vitiello** Linda L. Waits Sharon J. Waters* Marianne L. Waterstradt Borden D. Webb** Gregory S. Weber* Michael C. Weed Joseph J. Weninger* Jeremy P. West Mark K. White Blair H. Widders R. Parker White William P. Yee** Summer 2011 Julie Young* Richard J. Yrulegui* Joanna Yum Jennet Zapata Allan S. Zaremberg* Jacqueline C. Zee Victor F. Zonana CORPORATE COUNCIL Businesses, Corporations, Law Firms & Organizations Aerojet General The Ahluwalia Firm American Immigration Lawyers Association Angelo, Kilday & Kilduff Law Office of Mark Ankcorn Applied Wireless Consulting, Inc. Barwick Law Firm Baydaline & Jacobson, LLP Boutin, Gibson, DiGiusto & Hodell, Inc. California Advocates, Inc. Capitol City Trial Lawyers Association Law Office of Rocky K. Copley Cora Cole and Associates Dahl & Dahl, Attorneys at Law Dennis John Durkin, Attorney at Law Diepenbrock Harrison, APC Downey Brand Attorneys, LLP Dreyer Babich Buccola Wood, LLP Drobny Law Offices, Inc. Gordon & Rees, LLP Gray and Thurn, Inc. Greenberg Traurig, LLP Christopher E. Grell Law Office Hansen, Kohls, Jones, Sommer & Jacob, LLP Hardy, Erich, Brown & Wilson Hiroshima, Jacobs, Roth & Lewis Holden Law Group Hollister Law Corporation Jacobsen & McElroy, PC Kershaw, Cutter & Ratinoff, LLP Law Offices of Gary A. Kessler Jean S. Klotz Attorney at Law Knox, Lemmon, Anapolsky, & Schrimp, LLP Kronick, Moskovitz, Tiedemann & Girard LaFollette, Johnson, DeHaas, Fesler & Ames Larscheid, Buchanan & Zeff Gustavo Matheus, Esq, LLC Law Offices of Jean C. McEvoy Murphy Pearson Bradley and Feeney *5+ years of membership ****20+ years of membership Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLP Pacific Gas & Electric Corporation Rains, Lucia, Stern, PC City of Riverside Attorney’s Office Russell Sacramento Estate Planning Council Sacramento Kings and Monarchs Sacramento Valley Bankruptcy Forum Security First Segal & Kirby, LLP Law Offices of Manuel Sison Smith Law Firm Stevens, O’Connell and Jacobs, LLP Stone & Associates Super Schulman Ortho Study Group, Inc. Sussman and Associates Thomas Safran & Associates Thomson Reuters Law Offices of Bradley S. Towne Trainor Fairbrook Wiggins, Richard, Romano & Thorson, LLP Foundations E. L. Cord Foundation The Hugh & Hazel Darling Foundation The Morton & Marcine Friedman Foundation The Beverly J. Gepfer Charitable Foundation Mr. & Mrs. William D. James Foundation The Robert T. Matsui Foundation The Morrison & Foerster Foundation Peggy & Tom Pollock Foundation Sacramento Region Community Foundation The San Francisco Foundation George H. Sandy Foundation The Setzer Foundation State Farm Companies Foundation The Telfeyan Evangelical Fund, Inc. DONORS— ALUMNI & FRIENDS Barristers Circle $500+ David Charles Adams Gordon P. Adelman Laurie M. Aloisio Mark D. Ankcorn Anthony A. Babcock Jason Borg John L. Clark **10+ years of membership ***15+ years of membership Robert F. Cochran Robert D. Collins Rocky K. Copley Ross E. de Lipkau Mariel E. Dennis Michael R. Faber Margaret C. Felts Candice L. Fields Carole Johnson Gray William C. Hahesy, Jr. Karen L. Jacobsen C. Christian Jacobson William S. Jue Christian P. Kerry Daniel V. Kohls Mark C. Krausse Adam J. Krolikowski Richard K. Lee James R. McGuire Kevin S. McMurray Mary T. Muse Timothy S. Naprawa Allan J. Owen Jere M. Owen Bonnie Persons David Salem Betty Sandford Rama Sethi-Gulati Karen L. Snell Evan T. Sussman Bryan N. Wagner Keith C. Wetmore Alba Witkin Amicus Lex Circle $250+ Robert A. Aronson Paul A. Bacigalupo Joshua L. Baker Meghan M. Baker Janet E. Bender Joan M. Bernick Timothy Blaine Andrew L. Braden Linda Brandenburger Stephen A. Brandenburger Kevin B. Briggs Paul S. Burns Sarah M. Carlson Jeffrey B. Carra Linda E. Carter Lisa M. Cho Stephen R. Cline Daniel P. Custodio John A. Don Leslie A. Dunsworth Gilbert B. Feibleman Kathleen T. Friedrich Judith E. Gilson James M. Goldberg Gregory J. Goodwin Randal W. Graves Lori J. Gualco Lawrence N. Hensley Joyce D. Hinrichs George C. Hollister Kenneth R. Howard Allan J. Jacobson William J. Kadi Jennifer B. Kaufman Mark W. Knobel Robert W. Kutz Ronald R. Lamb Mark H. LaRocque David H. Levin Jay E. Levine Lois B. Levine Joel S. Levy Christine H. Long Bryan A. Lowe Hether C. Macfarlane Stephen M. Macfarlane P. John Mancuso Dennis H. Mangers Ann Marie Marciarille Joseph A. Martin Robert P. McElhany John P. McGill Patrick J. McGrath John R. McIntyre & Francesca J. Negri Crystal H. McMurtry Evangelin M. Miller Michael B. Mount Rachel V. Palmer Brian C. Pearcy Thomas A. Richard Curtis D. Rindlisbacher Claude D. Rohwer Lynn L. Rohwer Robert D. Roth Stephen A. Saitas Dana B. Simonds James A. Simonds, DMD Robin L. Stewart Robert Tronvig, Jr. Sim von Kalinowski James R. Wakefield Frederic J. Warner Stephen A. Weiner David L. Winter E. Terrence Woolf Stanley & Christi Yang Wendy C. York Douglas L. Youmans McGeorge Circle $100+ Jonathan D. Adams Mary D. Aguirre Matthew D. Alger Gabriele K. Alger-Greulich David D. Alves Craig F. Andersen Seward L. Andrews Brian Andritch Susan G. Andritch Ruthe C. Ashley Jonette T. Banzon Norman P. Barth Charles E. Bauer Gifford G. Beaton David J. Beauvais Joseph J. Bell Lawrence A. Bennett Monica A. Bennett Charlotte M. Bible Christopher P. Blake Tia Boatman Patterson Martin R. Boersma Halsey Boyd Clarence L. Bradford Hugh E. Brereton Andrew E. Briseno Ronald J. Britt Christopher L. Brooks Jonathan D. Brown David Bunning Bruce W. Busch D. N. Camacho John J. Cardile Margaret Carew Toledo Malcolm R. Carling-Smith Donald Carper Patricia A. Carper W. Gerald Chang Ann Bailey & Boren Chertkov John B. Cinnamon Pamela E. Cogan Michael T. Colatrella, Jr. Dawn H. Cole Clifford G. Collard Brent P. Collinson William S. Colwell James R. Conner Richard K. Corbin H. Christopher Covington James M. Coyne Thomas A. Coyne Michael & Catherine Curran Omar M. Dajani Michael J. Daponde John & Marilyn Darlington Leah D. Daughetee Kathryn M. Davis William W. Davis James F. Dawson John L. Defenbaugh Paul M. DeMersseman Karen Dietzen James E. Dighero Timothy J. Donovan Hilary M. Dozer Mark D. Dunlop Angelo A. DuPlantier, III Dennis J. Durkin Gregory W. Dwyer Jennifer Anderson Eason Matthew R. Eason Patricia L. Eichar Mark L. Eisenberg Eric F. Eisenlauer Christopher H. Engh Howard E. Engle, Jr. Erika A. Englund Janice M. Fallman Steven Faringhy Thomas E. Flynn Michael T. Fogarty Karen R. Forcum Eden Forsythe Robert A. Foster, II Timothy M. Frawley Judith D. Fryer Margaret Heiser Fulton Christine Morse Galves Fred T. Galves William E. Gasbarro Cindy D. Goldberg Kevin J. & Susan Gonzalez Gilbert A. Grodsky Karl W. Grossenbacher Eugene T. Gualco C. Joseph Guild, III Michael A. Guiliana Brian N. Gurwitz Y. Renee Gurwitz Hugh E. Hackney Lawrence B. Hagel Lon D. Hamburger Robert K. Hanna Darrell C. Harriman Ronald I. Harrison Patricia E. Hart Macie J. Hawkes Ravi S. Hayashida Allan C. Henriques Frances G. Herbert Maureen P. Higgins Howard K. Hirahara Robert T. Hjelle Shelby L. Hladon Scott & Viki Hom Rodney G. Hughes John S. Husser, Sr. Milton E. Jackson, II Leslie Gielow Jacobs David C. James John W. Jay Barton R. Jenks Bruce D. Jennett Janice C. Johnson Mark K. Johnson Marshall F. Johnson Sarah B. Johnson Paul B. Jones Irving B. Joseph John M. Junkin James F. Kane Anna Kapetanakos James J. Keenan, Jr. Kathleen H. Kelly Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 53 DONORS—ALUMNI & FRIENDS, McGeorge Circle: Donald P. Kennedy Gary A. Kessler Rodney Kim Michael F. Klein Jean S. Klotz Charles C. Kobayashi Steven R. Kosach Gregory & Clemence Kucera Jeannene L. Lafarga Mitchell Landsberg Robert& Marianne Leard Bradford H. Lee David G. Lee Russell W. Lee, DDS Albert J. Lenzi Thomas A. Leupp Andrew S. Levey Elan R. Levey Darrel W. Lewis Kathleen McConahay Lewis Peter N. Lindquist Carol R. Loewenstein Rudolph E. Loewenstein Ronald & Marilyn Louie Wenyan Luo James W. Luther Patricia A. Lynch Mike H. Madokoro Joseph E. Maloney Jerry & Jennifer Mann Matthew D. Marca Jeff B. Marschner Michael N. McCallum Anthony K. McClaren Jean C. McEvoy Bill McGee W. Kearse McGill J. Douglas McGilvray Polly W. McGilvray Patrick M. McGrath Brian D. McKay Charles H. McKeag Dan G. McKinney Linda T. McKinney Euell E. McKown, III H. Vincent McLaughlin Shana S. Faber McLaughlin Suzanne L. McNealy Michael P. McPherrin Karen E. Michael Michelle S. Michaels Christopher M. Micheli David R. Miller Daria F. Milton Jeffrey A. Mitchell William R. Mitchell Thomas M. Morlan Jessie Morris, Jr. Virginia Morris Howard E. Moseley Lianne Silver Moseley Mary-Beth Moylan 54 P a c i f i c L aw Kathleen M. Mullarkey Daniel F. Mullin Karl F. Munz Todd A. Murray Gary L. Nemetz John G. Neville Ralph R. Nevis, III John S. Nitao Daniel J. Noonan Ilene R. Noonan Robert M. Noone Gary W. Norris L. Jeffrey Norwalk Robert J. O’Hair Rebecca J. Olson David C. O’Mara Guy E. Ortoleva James R. Palmer M. Jane Pearce Frances L. Pearson Thomas A. Pedreira Svetlana V. Petroff Peter H. Pickslay Tamara J. Pierson Joseph S. Pinkas Ann Leahy Piper Glen R. Piper Shakira D. Pleasant William L. Porter Douglas B. Powrie Carlos A. Privat Jennifer M. Protas Donald C. Pullen Aviva Radbord Aaron S. Ralph Ian A. Rambarran Sharon Pogue Ranasinghe James M. Ratzer Darrell S. Richey John E. Riddle Michael J. Ritter Shirley Haller Ritter Katherine A. Rojo del Busto Mario Rojo del Busto Marcia A. Ross John W. Rosskopf Jerry F. Ruiz Lisa V. Ryan Steven C. Sabbadini Richard & Martha Sabol Mark H. Salyer Leslie Sandford & Francisco Lobaco Roger J. Sato Richard G. Schickele Edward G. Schloss Anne Schmitz Robert F. Schneider Diana P. Scott Jill H. Scrivner Gina C. Session Kenneth L. Shapero Margaret S. Shedd Summer 2011 Janet G. Sherwood Thomas M. Sherwood Robin L. Singer Victor D. Sipos Manuel C. Sison James C. Smith R. Michael Smith Roger A. Smith Thomas A. Smith David & Ann Socher O. J. Solander Richard R. Sooy Rita-Jane M. Spillane Jerry Spolter James C. Spurling Jill R. Stecher Val G. Stephens Ward A. Tabor Andrew P. Tauriainen Vida L. Thomas William L. Thompson Bradley S. Towne Marc W. Trost Mary E. Tryon Karen Y. Uchiyama Cynda R. Unger Phillip R. Urie Robert S. Van Der Volgen, Jr. Steven R. Van Sicklen Andrea Johnson Velasquez Mark R. Velasquez Michael E. Vergara Plauche F. Villere, Jr. Charles Volpe Darius A. Vosylius Christopher W. Waddell Clarence Walden Robert B. Walker, Jr. Kelly J. Walls Robert J. Weiss Daniel A. Weitzman Richard T. Welsh Roy L. Westfall Frederick G. Wiesner Noreen Santella Williams Terrence D. Williams Richard E. Williamson F. L. Willis, Jr. Neal R. Winchell Jimmie Wing Gerrit W. Wood Randolph C. Wright Jack J. Wu Linda Yackzan Randolph & Lynne Yackzan Leilani Yang Cameron T. Yee Jimmy N. Yee Matt R. Young Donations David Abelson Francis J. Abi-Nader Steven Abrams Fernando S. Acosta Bernadine Schaber Adams Lorna Adams Virginia D. Adams Amir F. Adil Lenore L. Albert Dennis K. Albiani Mark D. Alcorn Alison E. Aleman Bruce B. Alexander Daniel R. Allemeier Andrew L. Allen Hugh O. Allen John B. Allen, Jr. Susan A. Allen Lila Y. Al-Marhoon Richard C. Alpers Doreen R. Altman Justin S. Altmann Frances An Louis J. Anapolsky Lynette S. Andersen Gina L. Anderson Bradley E. Angell Robert L. S. Angres Chadney C. Ankele Anonymous Maureen Meehan Aplin Thomas P. Aplin George Arack, Jr. Alex J. Aretakis C. Lee Armstrong, III Robert W. Armstrong Leslie A. Arnal Jerry P. Arnold Kim Rowbatham Arnold Garth W. Aubert Brian P. Azemika William T. Babbitt David J. Bader David M. Bainbridge J. Stanton Bair, III Mary Bajo Alan P. Baker Bruce S. Baker Katey P. Bakerjian Susan Ball Rothe Marie C. Ballon Stephanie M. Bamberger Rudy Banuelos Whitney E. Barazoto William E. Barnaby William E. Barnes Amanda J. Barrett Charles R. Barrett, Jr. David H. Bartholomew Michael Bartok Jill Barwick David Basner Gregory A. Bastian Rod A. Baydaline Timothy P. Bazar Jeremy F. Beeson Brendan J. Begley Katie E. Belisle Raneene Belisle Katherine Bellotti Porter George N. Benesch Robert F. Bennett, Jr. Wesley Benoit Kathleen Benton Steven C. Benton Anna Maria Bereczky-Anderson Andrea E. Bergquist William E. Bernard Deborah A. Berry Kenneth Berry, III Richard P. Bertolino Paul M. Bertone Laurel A. Berzanskis Katherine A. Beshak Robert K. Best Darren M. Bevan Hema C. Bhamre Claude L. Biddle, Jr. Raquel Birch Thomas & Elizabeth Birmingham Todd S. Bissell John H. Black, Jr. Carl P. Blaine Scott T. Blaising Kristin A. Blocher Linda Bloom Thomas M. Bloom Dave E. Blum Barbara Boccia Gordon G. Bones Eric M. Bonzell Terry M. Borchers Robert & Denise Borcyckowski Doug Borden Stephen M. Boreman Doris Bostick Dana R. Botello Ann S. Boutin Gordon W. Bowley Rob Brackett James W. Bradshaw Robert W. Brannen Shawna Heinmiller Braun Jerrold Braunstein Amy H. Breitbart John C. Bridges Albert W. Brodie James W. Brody Jodie Hardmeyer Brokowski Margaret M. Broussard Anne H. Brown Carrie L. Brown Chanel R. Brown James E. Brown Kristen A. Brown Lester J. Brown Penelope R. Brown R. Christine Brown Ronald W. Brown Rebecca Bruch Rosemary A. Bruckner Adrienne L. Brungess Kevin L. Bryant Julia D. Brynelson J. Scott Buchanan Lynsie N. Bunton Patrick S. Bupara Jason W. Burgess Teresa M. Burke Robert E. Burness, III Karen A. Burt Randall Burton Richard J. Burton Eileen J. Buxton Stephen Byers Brent P. Bynum James T. Cahalan Douglas H. Calkins Lori D. Calvert Jacqueline A. Campbell Linda S. Campbell Robert F. Campbell Patricia Cano Ruben Cantu Mark L. Carlson Laura Carrell-Stephan Jeffrey A. Carriker Christina Carroll Gay L. Carroll Joseph W. Carroll Mark A. Carroll Roger A. Cartozian Greg A. Casagrande Anthony M. Caselli Paul Cass Brian J. Cassidy David L. Cava Christopher D. Cavagnaro Robert M. Cavallaro Christopher Chamness Nicholas T. Chan Paul Chan David N. Chandler, Jr. David N. Chandler, Sr. Cory B. Chartrand L. Michelle Chavis Andre M. Chernay Christopher R. Chin Michael M. L. Ching Henry Chiu Juliet H. Cho Sam Y. Chon Justin W. Chong Nilesh Choudhary Ralf Christe Cathy Christian Madison M. Christian Jason Chu Robin Chung Julie Brown Cipolla Pete Cladianos Sandra L. Clark Walter M. Clark Eric S. Clarke Paul C. Clauss Stephanie A. Clauss Christopher Cleland Ed M. Cleofe Rex A. Cluff Lawrence M. Cobb Nicolaie Cocis James E. Coffey Sara J. Coghlan McDonald John H. Cohenour Steven Cohn Jessica Cole Sean R. Coletta Thomas A. Collins Michelle E. Compton Cynthia A. Condos Peter Conlin Adrian R. Contreras Mauriah E. Conway Alfred M. Cook Christopher J. Cook Katherine Larsen Cook Sharon V. Cooper Natalie A. Cordellos Armando Coro Tiffany D. Corona Matt Corsaut Jeffrey L. Corzine Dennis Cota Stephanie Tom Coupe Barry J. Cox Carmen-Nicole Cox Robert R. Coyle Scott Craven Diane E. Crawford Judith A. Cregan William P. Creger Stephen A. Critzer Lawrence M. Cron James N. Crowell Daniel J. Croxall Richard Cunha Jason J. Curliano Kevin B. Curran Shawn J. Curtin Michele Cusack Christine J. Cusick David P. Cusick Dennis C. Cusick Timothy P. Dailey Jeffrey L. Daniel Lance Daniel Sarah R. Dansereau Matthew W. Darby Jenny L. Darlington-Person Alan R. Darneille Gerard C. Dasey Laurence B. Dashiell Lon D. Davenport Benjamin A. Davies Daniel M. Davis Eugene J. Davis James M. Davis Sarah Davis Fred N. Dawson Richard V. De Gruccio Jose Felix De La Torre Tito P. De Leon, III Robert C. De Voe Edward S. Deacon Annette DeAndreis Gary Decker Anthony & Elinor DeCristoforo David G. Delaini David M. Delehant Jill A. Demmel Susan Rhodes Denious William F. Denious Dori L. Dennis Moorehead Michael R. Dennis Linda D. Deos John A. DeRonde, Jr. Gerald J. Desmond, Jr. Richard F. Desmond, Jr Mark W. Deutinger Melissa Devore McElheney Jeffry B. Diamond Geraldine E. Diaz Florence DiBenedetto Laurence P. Digesti Troy K. Dinin Joseph Dita, III David Ditora Vera J. Divenyi Brian Dixon Lucy A. Dodds Michael P. Dolan Paul T. Dolberg Sarah E. Donald James W. Doran Stephen J. Dougan Bradford J. Dozier Michael Dozier Ruanne Dozier Marshall N. Drack Jeffrey R. Dreiling Joseph E. Driscoll Mark S. Drobny Daniel H. Drummy Richard T. Dudek Colleen M. Duffy Kevin T. Dunbar Lara Diaz Dunbar Virginia J. Dunlap Edward K. Dunn Kimberley L. Dunn Jack Duran, Jr. Amy L. Durbin Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 55 DONORS—ALUMNI & FRIENDS, Donations: William J. Edgar James M. Edwards Derek B. Egge David T. Egli Jeffrey E. Ehlenbach Jennifer C. Ehn Gregg A. Eichler Eric A. Elberg Hope C. Elder Christine A. Elliott Annie Embree Matthew Emrick Patrick L. Enright Kelley Evans Sierra E. Evans James J. Falcone Robert Farnsworth Gregory K. Federico Cynthia J. Fee Courtney Fein Keren Feingold Marc J. Feinstein Jennifer L. Ferraiuolo Annette E. Ferrante Carl L. Fessenden David Fillerup Edward B. Fischel William J. Fisher Birgit A. Fladager Michael J. Flanagan Jacob D. Flesher Reed M. Flocks Pedro Flores David A. Flores-Workman Emily Foehr Alison P. Fong Thomas E. Foran Andrea J. Ford Kristian E. Foy Thomas M. Frame James J. Franco Carolyn J. Frank William S. Frank Justin S. Freeborn Thomas O. Freeburger Dennis R. Freidig Brand Frentz, III Erik E. Frye Jeffrey J. Fuller Laurel A. Gaiser Raymond & D. M. Gallagher Mary C. Garcia Emily S. Garcia Uhrig Michele Garfinkel Eric R. Garner Shelby M. Gatlin Melissa Geisen John M. Gerrard Marc C. Gessford Franklin A. Gevurtz Steven G. Gibbs J. Neil Gieleghem 56 P a c i f i c L aw Amanda Labrot Gilbert Richard L. Gilbert Roger G. Gilbert George R. Gillespie Robyn Ginney Erika S. Giorgi Scott M. Gitlen Daniel S. Glass Paula Gluzman Deborah A. Glynn Sandra G. Goen-Harris Alex T. Goetze Paul E. Gold Daniel P. Golla Catherine J. Goodin John M. Goralka Robert S. Gordon George R. Gore Jennifer V. Gore Mark F. Goudy Pamela D. Gourley Adam A. Grable Justin M. Graham Lark P. Granger James Granucci Don E. Green Stephen Green Melissa S. Greenidge Christina M. Griffin Johnny L. Griffin, III TeriAnn Grimes Paul L. Grimm Dimitri P. Gross Martin Grossman Sandy Grossman Mira C. Guertin Monica E. Guillen Aaron M. Gumbinger Niti Gupta Leanne Gurney George A. Guthrie Rania Habib David E. Haddock Sylvia B. Halkousis Coyle Allyson C. Hall Christine R. Hall Lori R. Hall Samuel C. Hall Richard H. Halladay Linda L. Hamel Christine Hansen Kyle R. Hansen Molly C. Brueck Hanson Craig L. Harasek Stefanie U. Hardy Jace E. Hargis James A. Harley George E. Harper Jeffrey B. Harris John R. Harrison, Jr. Erik A. Hart Kellie Harrington Hartman Summer 2011 Kelly Auerbach Hassel Kathleen M. Hateley Thomas D. Hathaway Vinton J. Hawkins Edgar W. Hawkyard Dean R. Heidrich Craig A. Henderson David C. Henderson George M. Hendrickson Brooke P. Hennessy Sharon Heringer Arnulfo Hernandez, Jr. Jeffery C. Hesseltine Karin S. Hesseltine Valerie J. Higgins Terry L. Higham Kenneth J. Hilliard Julia A. Himovitz Judy F. Hirano Emily R. Hirsekorn Shannon R. Hochstein Stephanie M. Hodson Paul Hoff Carla M. Hoime Mark A. Hoime Paul S. Hokokian Jennifer B. Holdener John R. Holstedt Patrick D. Holstine Robin S. Hom Luke A. Homen Michael A. Horowitz Susan M. Hough Caitlin E. Howard Jackie M. Howard Michelle A. Howland John R. Huckabay Douglas W. Hudson Lindsey C. Hulse John M. Hunter Ann E. Hurst Hugh T. Huynh Vivien C. Ide John S. Immordino Michael B. Indrajana Thomas P. Infusino Michael B. Ipson Sandra Lickiss Isom Kurtiss A. Jacobs Wendy S. Jaffe-Pressman John P. Jarrett Mark R. Jensen Jeena R. Jiampetti Jason L. Jimenez Brent Y. Jo Kenneth R. Johnson Lester Johnson Mark Johnson William G. Johnson G. Steven Jones Pamela S. Jones Daniel P. Jordan, Jr. Todd A. Juchau Tannaz L. Katen Carin C. Kaeser Christopher J. Kaeser Fred W. Kaiser Warren E. Kamm Joel A. Kane Sharyn E. Kaplan Matthew E. Karanian Serineh Karapetian Brian K. Kau Thomas J. Kearney Mary A. Keefer Janice N. Keller Amy L. Kendrick Mary L. Kennedy Rodney J. Key Robert T. Keyser Melissa J. Keyzer Douglas M. Kilduff Randall C. Kimose Robert E. Kingsley Lianold L. Kinnett Kathy M. Kinser Joseph F. Klatt Alexis M. Klein Mark S. Klitgaard Thomas F. Klumper Victoria L. Knitter Kathryn Kohlman Druliner Sarah Kollman Andrea Konstad Stephen A. Koonce Stephen L. Kowalewski Carla R. Kralovic Andreanna I. Ksidakis Emily LaMoe Norah C. Lamond Noelle J. Lamprecht Elizabeth A. Landsberg Rachel Landsberg & Tzvi Mackson Janine L. Lantz Eric O. Larsen Charles Latimer Megan A. Laurie Cynthia G. Lawrence Anna E. Leach-Proffer Casey J. LeClair Brian K. Lee Christopher B. Lee Donald D. Lee Eric C. Lee Jessica R. Lee Paul K. Lee Ralph C. Lee Rebecca Davis Lee Sheri L. Leonard Teresa R. Leoni Roy C. Levin Samuel J. Levy Thomas R. Lewandowski Judith A. Linck Ted Lindstrom Gary L. Link Isabel Y. Liou Miki R. Liviakis Anna L. Locke Alan G. LoFaso James P. Logan, Jr. Patricia C. Lonzo Robert L. Lopez Timothy J. Lopez Michelle D. Low Amanda Roberts Lowe Lawrence L. Lozensky Kent M. Luckey Steven H. Lybbert James B. Lynch Marilyn H. Macey Roderick L. MacKenzie Peter L. Madson Donald J. Maher Arthur Mallory Rachel Mandelberg Michael A. Manlin Edward Manning Christine Manolakas Caitlin Ross Manoogian Jason A. Manoogian Catherine L. Manske Jorge B. Maradiegue Efren De Los Reyes Marinas Stephanie Maroun Elizabeth M. Martin Julie Clark Martin Roland K. Martin, Jr. Sandra S. Martin Daniel R. Martinez Kelley Martinez Marvin C. Marx Eric G. Masamori Linda Sebben Mathes Catherine R. G. Mattesich R. Kevin Mayo Thelonius C. M. McCann Randal C. McClendon Rick McClendon Lyman F. McConnell Michael B. McDonald John R. McDonough Nancy N. McDonough Sean C. McGah Steven A. McGee William A. McGrath Joseph A. McIntosh Brady D. McLeod Melissa A. McMillon Charlyn McNamara Kelly C. McSpadden Amie C. McTavish Joan M. Medeiros Johanne C. Medina Philippe C. Melin Peter F. Melnicoe Kyle W. Memmott Jennifer Lee L. Mendoza Terry R. Menefee Erin K. Merrill Annemarie Meyer David E. Meyerson Johanna E. Michael Robert B. Mikel Mikyla J. Miller Stephanie A. Miller Julie A. Milligan Colin W. Mills David Milton Alice E. Mimms Eugenie D. Mitchell Karen Mitchell Karoleen N. Mito Ronald E. Moe Janine Molgaard Brooke N. Moller Jack T. Molodanof John D. Montague David C. Moody Christopher M. Moore Preston L. Morgan Kristi A. Morioka John R. Morris Robert E. Moss, Jr. Matthew J. Moye William A. Muha Milton G. Mullanax Gene G. Muramoto Elaine A. Musser Jill Nathan Daniel G. Nauman Steven T. Naumchik Mark T. Neel Jess Negrete Thomas A. Neil David S. Nelson Michael R. Nelson James L. Nerli, Jr Ray Newman Iris S. Newton Andrew M. Nguyen Julie T. Nguyen Khanh H. Nguyen Timothy R. Nibler Danesha Galbreith Nichols Courtney N. Nievergelt Richard D. Nobles Carolynne J. Nocella Sally Gohlke Noma Stephen W. North Bruce M. Notareus Courtney A. Nowling Barbara L. Ochsner Brian J. O’Connor Kathleen A. O’Connor Tom T. Okubo Elizabeth Dietzen Olsen John R. Olson Matthew J. Olson Joseph D. O’Neil Tracey L. O’Reilly Rizaldy T. Ortiz Allen C. Ostergar, III Teri A. Ostling Dorothy B. Osuna Lori L. K. Ozaki Frank M. Pacheco Joe Paglieroni Anil Pai Young L. Park Linda R. Parke Gerardo Partida Paul J. Pascuzzi Ruben M. Pastrana Rocco R. Paternoster Al J. Patrick Christopher W. Patterson Kathryn L. Patterson Richard M. Pattison Lesya N. Paulovich Kim L. Penrose David L. Perrault Gary G. Perry Gregson M. Perry Robert A. Perry Jordan Peters Jeannette Peterson Katherine C. Pettibone James C. Pettis Kelly Cesare Pfeiffer Lynn H. Phan Veronica J. Philipp Dan C. Phillips Todd A. Picker Jennifer R. Pierce Brooke D. Pierman Estela O. Pino Carolyn L. Pirillo Sapphira Kwa Pixler Antonia M. Plazibat Nelson A. Pohl Christina E. Poley Dean Pollack Glenn N. Powell John V. Powell, III Anthony Previte Jeremy B. Price Michelle R. Proctor Mark A. Pruner Courtney M. Przybylski J. Brian Putler Valerie E. Quan Sharon L. Quinn Erin J. Radekin Heather L. Rae Yasha Rahimzadeh Genaro C. Ramirez Suzanne M. Ramirez Leslie R. Ramos Sheila Evans Ramos Katherine I. Rankin Roberta J. Ranstrom Daniela R. Razawi Nancy Armentrout Reagan Jeffrey T. Reed Julia Reeves Frank J. Regan Thomas M. Regan Stephanie D. Reid Richard F. Rescho Matthew J. Rexroad Kathleen M. Rhoads Brooks V. Rice Robert B. Rice, III Steve D. Rick Dimitrios T. Rigopoulos Martin Rios James M. Ritchey Stephen Robbins Tyler C. Roberts Cheryl P. Robertson Juliette Tognetti Robertson Craig S. Robson Kevin D. Rodman Joanne Delong Rodriguez Pauline Rodriguez Chester A. Rogaski, Jr. Virginia G. Rogers Todd R. Rohloff William A. Romaine Lawrence H. Root Elise S. Rose John D. Rose R. Mark Rose Jennifer N. Rosenfeld Mary K. Ross Paul L. Ross Bret R. Rossi Steven M. Rotblatt Eric D. Rouen Casie M. Roussas John G. Roussas David L. Rowell Marisa L. Rubitz Marcia M. Ruf Christopher P. Rugaard Amy H. Ruggles Brittany E. Rupley James W. Rushford Craig W. Russi Gabriel A. Rutherford David M. Rutz Stephen A. Ryan Andrew F. Sackheim Rose Safarian Dustin Saiidi Andrea E. Saint Grace K. Sakaguchi-Lally Charles W. Sanders, Jr. Kevin Sandford Nina Santo Reynaldo C. Santos Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 57 DONORS—ALUMNI & FRIENDS, Donations: Victoria A. Sapunor Melissa D. Sato E. Sue Saunders Tiffany B. Scalia Marvin Schafer Dean W. Schirmer Howad Schmidt Robert R. Schmitt Jan Schori Peter C. Schreiber Jack S. Schroeder Richard G. Schwab Steven A. Schwartz Ronald C. Schwarzkopf Shelley K. Scott Kristine M. Scribner Glendalee Scully Jed Scully William B. Seabridge Erica L. Seeman Brian A. Segal Michael C. Self Robert E. Self R. Craig Settlemire Jennifer M. Settles John L. Shadek Raymond & Joanne Shamp Beverly J. Shane Lara R. Shapiro Nagmeh Shariatmadar Tiffani S. Sharp Timothy A. Sheaffer Lana M. Shearer Adam B. Shoor Gail H. Silverman Ian Silvers Justin J. Simpson James D. Skow Claude & Barbara Smart Alan J. Smith Betty Smith Carsen P. Smith Colin Smith Lawrence M. Smith Stephen A. Smith Marilyn Berlin Snell Michael J. Snoke Devin Sodt Lyle D. Solomon James Spagnole Earl L. Spaulding Joseph M. Spector Maria L. Salazar Sperber John W. Spittler Trina L. Spivack Molly Lynn Stafford Max Stamm Deon R. Stein Theresa A. Stein Alan M. Steinberg Heidi L. Steinke Paul C. Steinke 58 P a c i f i c L aw Carrie M. Stephens Melinda J. Steuer Charles J. Stone Michelle L. Stowell Wendy S. Stultz Stanley Su Emma Suarez Pawlicki Kimberly S. Sullivan Linda Sullivan Charles C. Summerell Susan L. Sutherland Rochelle I. Harry Swanson Thomas M. Swett Molly K. Sword Robert S. Tabor Bryan L. Tallman Kenneth K. Tanji, Jr. Elizabeth A. Tanner J. David Taormino Rosemary P. Tarantino Paul F. Taylor Wendy A. Taylor Sarah B. Telschow Blake P. Temple E. Lizette Lobner Temple Gregory A. Tenorio Lance K. Terpstra Michael D. Testerman Jennifer Thai Don R. Thompson Lauri S. Thompson Paul B. Thompson Dorothy H. Thomson Elise O. Thorn Joseph B. Thuesen Mark A. Tikosh Alvin S. Tobias Gordon Tomsic Kenric P. Torkelson Antonio Torlai Sue E. Torngren Tami Iskyan Toumayan Spencer R. Tressler Kristin J. Triepke Blair D. Trigg Chance L. Trimm Elizabeth S. Trimm Paula G. Tripp Colleen D. Truden Angela A. Trueblood Kimberlee Gerton Tsai Seaton Tsai Cynthia K. Tuck David W. Tyra Ronn R. Uchihara Brian J. Ullmann Troy D. Vahidi William N. Van Dyke Thomas R. Van Noord Keith E. Van Wagner Kellie R. Vasen Gilberto B. Vega Summer 2011 Cori Sarno Villacres Colleen R. Villarreal Lorna A. Voboril Elizabeth A. Vogel Octavia V. Vrancuta Jason R. Wagner Barbara Wallace John W. Wallace, Jr. Thomas Wallace David S. Walsh Lorraine M. Walsh Hanspeter Walter Rachel E. Ward Vincent D. Ward, Jr. William J. Ward Alice H. Ware Lowell A. Warwick Rodney C. Waterbury Jane E. Watkins Kerrie D. Webb Kevin A. Webb Kristin M. Weigle David Weiner Steven J. Weitzer James C. Weydert Nancy K. Whalen Robert M. Wheatley John C. Whidden Alexis W. White Andrew D. White Gary R. White Linda S. White Michael S. White Vanessa C. Whitnell Robert F. Whitworth Michelle L. Wiederhold George A. Wieland, Jr. David R. Wiksell Richard H. Will R. Hillary Willett Cathleen Williams Katherine Williams Kimberly D. Willy Richard M. Wilner Maria Wilson Douglas P. Winter Grant A. Winter Dana F. Winterrowd Laurie G. Winterrowd Richard A. Wolf Dana K. Wolheim Albert S. Wong Jarrod L. Wong C. Craig Woo Jennifer C. Woo Teresa Woo Carleen M. Wood Crystal D. Wood Mark C. Wood Ryan C. Wood Joan C. Woodard Charlene L. Woodward David E. Wooten Rebecca Durst Wooten Susan M. Wright Kelly Yamashita & David Ortega Clara Yang Jesse Yang Roy Yang Thomas R. Yanger Timothy H. Yaryan Ryan J. Yates Kam T. Yee Charles E. Young Julia M. Young Mario U. Zamora Ken & Kathleen Zanotto Ophelia H. Zeff Grant R. Zehnder Peter B. Zerbib Lorna L. Zink Laurie E. Zmrzel Gifts in Honor or Memory of: James & Dorothy Adams Walter F. Alexander, III Raymond H. Biele Raymond Burr Horace Cecchettini Jerome J. Curtis, Jr. Francis B. Dillon Anna Rose Fischer B. Abbott Goldberg Paul W. Grunwald Tracy G. Helms Alexis G. Foote-Jones Glen Knox William H. Lally Lawrence D. Laven Rothwell Mason Tom McNally Luis S. Meza Carol J. Miller William K. Morgan John P. Morris Amy Olson Jeffrey Poilé Brian C. Porter Donald R. Prinz Kamal Ramsey Sadek Gordon D. Schaber Gary V. Schaber Diana P. Scott O. Robert Simons Ruth J. Squire R. T. Stratton Bruce W. Walker Matching Gifts Aerojet General The Morrison & Foerster Foundation Pacific Gas & Electric Corporation Russell CLASS GIFTS class of 1937 Paul L. Ross class of 1950 - 1959 John Q. Brown Joseph A. Martin Tom T. Okubo class of 1961 Harry K. Grafe Edward J. Tiedemann class of 1962 Seward L. Andrews class of 1963 Clarence L. Bradford class of 1965 Ronald I. Harrison Clarence Walden class of 1966 Benjamin Diaz Ronald E. Moe Jimmie Wing class of 1967 John R. Morris Timothy R. Nibler Ronald B. Robie Alvin S. Tobias class of 1968 Stephen A. Brandenburger J. Scott Buchanan Eugene T. Gualco Marvin C. Marx J. Douglas McGilvray Anthony M. Skrocki Roger A. Smith class of 1969 David D. Alves Claude L. Biddle, Jr. James W. Luther Patricia S. Mar Karl F. Munz Peter H. Pickslay Earl L. Spaulding class of 1970 Hugh O. Allen Ronald D. Alling George Arack, Jr. Robert K. Best Stephen R. Cline P. John Mancuso Brian D. McKay Peter F. Melnicoe Evangelin M. Miller Robert A. Perry Chester A. Rogaski, Jr. Lawrence H. Root Howard J. Stagg, IV Neal R. Winchell Jimmy N. Yee class of 1971 Donald Carper Robert M. Cavallaro Eric F. Eisenlauer Glenn A. Fait Karl W. Grossenbacher Robert K. Hanna H. Vincent Jacobs Rick McClendon Euell E. McKown III Vigo G. Nielsen Nancy B. Reardan O. J. Solander Antonio Torlai Borden D. Webb Stephen A. Weiner class of 1972 Gordon P. Adelman Robert D. Collins Richard K. Corbin Ross E. de Lipkau John A. DeRonde, Jr. Timothy J. Donovan William J. Kadi Rodney Kim Jean S. Klotz Steven R. Kosach Darrel W. Lewis Jeff B. Marschner Robert P. McElhany William A. McGrath Roberta J. Ranstrom Charles W. Sanders, Jr. Glendalee Scully William N. Van Dyke Steven R. Van Sicklen David Weiner F. L. Willis, Jr. Richard J. Yrulegui class of 1973 David W. Abbott Jerrold Braunstein Eileen J. Buxton Lon D. Davenport James F. Dawson James M. Day, Jr. Roger G. Gilbert Rodney G. Hughes Robert E. Kingsley David J. Kristjanson David P. Mastagni Robert B. Mikel David S. Nelson Michael J. Ritter James Spagnole J. David Taormino Frederic J. Warner Joseph J. Weninger Richard H. Will E. Terrence Woolf class of 1974 Craig F. Andersen William E. Barnaby Terry M. Borchers Hugh E. Brereton Ronald J. Britt John Q. Brown, III William C. Callaham David N. Chandler, Sr. J. Mitchell Cobeaga Robert C. De Voe Allan C. Henriques Paul Hoff John M. Hunter Barton R. Jenks Marshall F. Johnson John M. Junkin Gayle J. Lau James P. Logan, Jr. James L. Lopes Thomas M. Morlan John E. Riddle Craig W. Russi Arthur G. Scotland Jerry Spolter Timothy H. Yaryan Charles E. Young class of 1975 Francis J. Abi-Nader John H. Black, Jr. Carl P. Blaine Ronald E. Blubaugh Connie M. Callahan Roger A. Cartozian Robert F. Cochran James R. Conner John L. Cosgrove, Sr. Barry J. Cox James N. Crowell Alan R. Darneille Daniel M. Davis Dennis J. Durkin Thomas J. Feeney Michael T. Fogarty Robert A. Foster, II Jeffrey J. Fuller Bryan C. Hartnell David C. Henderson Robert T. Hjelle G. Steven Jones Warren A. Jones Warren E. Kamm Bruce A. Kilday Randall C. Kimose Richard K. Lee Michael A. Manlin Michael B. McDonald Steven A. Merksamer Hayne R. Moyer Al J. Patrick Jeffrey N. Paule David L. Perrault R. Mark Rose Ronald M. Sabraw Robert E. Self Margaret S. Shedd Janet G. Sherwood Thomas A. Smith John W. Spittler Robin L. Stewart Malcolm S. Swift Edward H. Telfeyan Robert Tronvig, Jr. Ophelia H. Zeff class of 1976 Jonathan D. Adams Anonymous Jeffery L. Arnold Jeremy F. Beeson Lawrence A. Bennett Albert W. Brodie Patrick S. Bupara Lawrence M. Cobb Charles B. Coyne Eugene J. Davis Richard K. Dickson, II Laurence P. Digesti Gilbert B. Feibleman Reed M. Flocks Timothy M. Frawley Dennis R. Freidig Erik E. Frye Randolph H. Getz Don E. Green Lawrence B. Hagel Richard H. Halladay Allan J. Jacobson Larry M. Kazanjian Lianold L. Kinnett Thomas S. Knox Robert W. Kutz Fern M. Laethem Rebecca Davis Lee James R. Lewis Robert C. MacKichan, Jr. Terry R. Menefee John D. Montague Michael B. Mount Gene G. Muramoto Todd A. Murray Richard D. Nobles Gary W. Norris Kathleen A. O’Connor Christopher W. Patterson Dan C. Phillips Sheila Evans Ramos Mark C. Raskoff Robert F. Schneider Jill H. Scrivner Thomas M. Sherwood Gail H. Silverman R. Michael Smith Val G. Stephens Susan L. Sutherland Thomas R. Van Noord Robert B. Walker, Jr. David S. Walsh Daniel A. Weitzman Katherine Williams class of 1977 David F. Anderson Daniel E. Angius Timothy P. Bazar Paul S. Burns Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 59 Anthony M. Caselli Louise L. Chiu John L. Clark Clifford G. Collard Alfred M. Cook Hilary M. Dozer Gregg A. Eichler Thomas M. Frame William E. Gasbarro James A. Harley George M. Hendrickson Arnulfo Hernandez, Jr. Sarah B. Johnson Eric O. Larsen R. Marilyn Lee Anthony L. Leggio Thomas A. Leupp Evelyn M. Matteucci Lyman F. McConnell John R. McDonough Kathleen M. Mullarkey Timothy E. Naccarato John G. Neville Robert J. O’Hair John R. Olson Sandra Price Otellini Gary G. Perry John W. Rosskopf Mark H. Salyer John L. Shadek Kenneth L. Shapero Stephen A. Smith Kenric P. Torkelson Charles W. Trainor George A. Wieland, Jr. Terrence D. Williams Albert S. Wong class of 1978 Daniel R. Allemeier Robert W. Armstrong David J. Bader David J. Beauvais Bruce T. Beesley Richard P. Bertolino Steven A. Block Bruce W. Busch Anthony J. Caruso Dawn H. Cole Kevin B. Curran Gregory W. Dwyer Michael R. Faber Thomas O. Freeburger Laurel A. Gaiser Thomas H. Gourlay, Jr. Leanne Gurney Judith A. Harper Maureen P. Higgins John R. Holstedt John S. Husser, Sr. Fred W. Kaiser Randall E. Kessler David R. Lane Rudolph E. Loewenstein Steven H. Lybbert Roderick L. MacKenzie 60 P a c i f i c L aw Roland K. Martin, Jr. John R. Masterman Nancy N. McDonough David C. Moody Jessie Morris, Jr. Mary T. Muse Gary L. Nemetz John V. Powell, III Darrell S. Richey Steven C. Sabbadini Diana P. Scott James D. Skow Richard R. Sooy Robert J. Weiss Mark C. Wood Randolph C. Wright Jack J. Wu Thomas R. Yanger William P. Yee Alfred E. Yudes, Jr. Allan S. Zaremberg class of 1979 Louis J. Anapolsky Rudy Banuelos Gregory A. Bastian Clifford P. Berg William E. Bernard Anne H. Brown Lester J. Brown Timothy F. Cahill Greg A. Casagrande Brent P. Collinson L. Kalei Fong Paul L. Grimm Roger G. Halfhide Darrell C. Harriman John R. Harrison, Jr. Dean R. Heidrich Paul S. Hokokian John W. Jay Debra J. Kazanjian James J. Keenan, Jr. Robert T. Keyser Albert J. Lenzi Jay E. Levine Judith A. Linck Gary L. Link Carol R. Loewenstein Sandra S. Martin Patricia A. McVerry David R. Miller Ann Morgan Daniel G. Nauman Allan J. Owen Tamara J. Pierson James W. Rushford William B. Seabridge Sheila J. Slaughter Dey James C. Smith C. M. Starr, II Vincent D. Ward, Jr. David L. Winter Gerrit W. Wood class of 1980 Bruce B. Alexander Summer 2011 William E. Barnes Charles R. Barrett, Jr. Michael Bartok Laurel V. Bell-Cahill H. Christopher Covington James M. Coyne Shawn J. Curtin Mark S. Drobny David T. Egli Christopher H. Engh Michael J. Flanagan Faith Geoghegan Lori J. Gualco John R. Huckabay Milton E. Jackson II Mark K. Johnson Daniel P. Jordan, Jr. Christian M. Keiner Charles Latimer David G. Lee Russell W. Lee, DDS Lawrence L. Lozensky Joseph E. Maloney Joseph A. McIntosh Eugenie D. Mitchell Karen Mitchell John A. Norwood Gregory Ogrod Martha Evenson Opich Richard Opich Paul K. Richardson Stephen A. Ryan R. Craig Settlemire Rita-Jane M. Spillane Linda Sullivan Rosemary P. Tarantino Michael Van Zandt Sim von Kalinowski Christopher W. Waddell Douglas L. Youmans class of 1981 C. Lee Armstrong, III James W. Bradshaw Rocky K. Copley Kathleen T. Coyne Gerard C. Dasey Janice M. Fallman Marc J. Feinstein Thomas E. Flynn Kathleen T. Friedrich John M. Gerrard Patricia E. Hart Kenneth R. Howard Irving B. Joseph Stephen A. Koonce Ronald R. Lamb Joel S. Levy Bryan A. Lowe Patricia A. Lynch C. Emmett Mahle Patrick J. McGrath Dan G. McKinney William R. Mitchell Janine Molgaard Donald C. Pullen Richard F. Rescho Elise S. Rose Edward G. Schloss Timothy A. Sheaffer Dorothy H. Thomson Bradley S. Towne Phillip R. Urie Linda L. Waits James R. Wakefield Alice H. Ware Sharon J. Waters Dana F. Winterrowd class of 1982 Mark D. Alcorn William G. Anderson, Jr. David Basner George N. Benesch Martin R. Boersma Jonathan D. Brown Ronald W. Brown David Bunning Douglas H. Calkins John J. Cardile Pamela E. Cogan Thomas A. Collins William S. Colwell David M. Delehant Gerald J. Desmond, Jr. Joseph E. Driscoll Jeffrey E. Ehlenbach J. Neil Gieleghem Scott M. Gitlen Sandra G. Goen-Harris Paul E. Gold Mark F. Goudy C. Joseph Guild, III William C. Hahesy, Jr. Jeffrey B. Harris Lawrence N. Hensley Kenneth J. Hilliard Ann E. Hurst C. Christian Jacobson James F. Kane Brian K. Kau Carolee Kilduff Mark W. Knobel Jorge B. Maradiegue H. Vincent McLaughlin Kelly C. McSpadden Virginia Morris Daniel F. Mullin Robert M. Noone Thomas A. Pedreira Mark A. Pruner Sharon L. Quinn Suzanne M. Ramirez Kevin D. Rodman Richard G. Schwab William L. Thompson Marc W. Trost Lorraine M. Walsh William J. Ward Gary R. White Linda S. White class of 1983 Anonymous Jill Barwick Gifford G. Beaton Barbara Boccia Andrew E. Briseno Robert A. Buccola Teresa M. Burke Steven M. Campora John B. Cinnamon Mariel E. Dennis Mark W. Deutinger Patrick L. Enright Brand Frentz, III Gregory J. Goodwin Carole L. Hansen Joyce D. Hinrichs Amanda Roberts Lowe Jean C. McEvoy Mary C. McGuire Shana S. Faber McLaughlin M. Jane Pearce Estela O. Pino Thomas M. Regan Christopher P. Rugaard E. Sue Saunders James C. Spurling Paula G. Tripp Cynda R. Unger Charles Volpe R. Hillary Willett Laurie G. Winterrowd class of 1984 Alison E. Aleman Robert A. Aronson Norman P. Barth Raneene Belisle Kathleen Benton Steven C. Benton Kevin B. Briggs Karen A. Burt Malcolm R. Carling-Smith David L. Cava Jeffrey L. Corzine Michele Cusack Jill A. Demmel Joseph Dita III Larry K. Dunn Mark L. Eisenberg David Fillerup Johnny L. Griffin, III Frances G. Herbert Robin S. Hom Vivien C. Ide David C. James Jennifer B. Kaufman Janice N. Keller Kathleen H. Kelly Andreanna I. Ksidakis Ilene R. Noonan Ramon E. Nunez Dennis J. Olmstead Nelson A. Pohl Wayne C. Raabe Bret R. Rossi Rose Safarian Lawrence M. Smith Margaret C. Stark-Roberts David W. Tyra Bryan N. Wagner David E. Wooten class of 1985 Gabriele K. Alger-Greulich John B. Allen, Jr. Thomas P. Aplin Susan Ball Rothe Charlotte M. Bible Todd S. Bissell Robert E. Burness, III Frank J. Christy, Jr. Sara J. Coghlan McDonald Robert R. Coyle Melissa Devore McElheney James E. Dighero Lucy A. Dodds Anne C. Fadenrecht Gail R. Fadenrecht Alison P. Fong Joseph C. George, Sr. Cindy D. Goldberg William G. Johnson Gary A. Kessler Marsha M. Lang Peter L. Madson Elizabeth M. Martin R. Kevin Mayo John B. Mulligan Iris S. Newton Daniel J. Noonan Gerardo Partida Gregson M. Perry Douglas B. Powrie J. Brian Putler James M. Ritchey Dana B. Simonds Ward A. Tabor Don R. Thompson Mary E. Tryon Richard E. Williamson class of 1986 Bruce S. Baker Charles E. Bauer Timothy Blaine Jacqueline A. Campbell Carlos A. Chavarria, Jr. Alberta C. Chew Stephen A. Critzer Andrew M. Cummings Edward S. Deacon Jeffry B. Diamond John A. Don Mona Halprin Ehrenreich Robert M. Ehrenreich Birgit A. Fladager William S. Frank Steven G. Gibbs Kimber B. Goddard Lark P. Granger Sylvia B. Halkousis Coyle Lon D. Hamburger Linda L. Hamel Edgar W. Hawkyard Karen L. Jacobsen Wendy S. Jaffe-Pressman Rodney J. Key Kent M. Luckey Daniel R. Martinez Julie A. Milligan Frances L. Pearson Michelle R. Proctor Genaro C. Ramirez Steve D. Rick William A. Romaine Jennifer N. Rosenfeld Brian J. Sacks Roger J. Sato Jill R. Stecher Steven J. Weitzer Douglas P. Winter C. Craig Woo class of 1987 Matthew D. Alger Chadney C. Ankele Kim Rowbatham Arnold Paul A. Bacigalupo Michael D. Belote Hema C. Bhamre Ann S. Boutin Sandra L. Clark Sharon V. Cooper Kevin T. Dunbar James J. Falcone Eric R. Garner Carole Johnson Gray Craig L. Harasek George E. Harper Kathleen M. Hateley Brian J. Heffernan Douglas W. Hudson Mark R. Jensen Matthew E. Karanian Kathy M. Kinser Stephen L. Kowalewski Dorothy S. Landsberg Roberto Marquez Katharine A. Martin Jack T. Molodanof Joseph A. Motta Todd A. Picker William L. Porter Andrea E. Saint Michael C. Self Colette Stone Carlson Tami Iskyan Toumayan Lorna A. Voboril Joan C. Woodard Charlene L. Woodward Laurie E. Zmrzel class of 1988 David Charles Adams Ruthe C. Ashley J. Stanton Bair, III Linda Bloom Robert F. Campbell Lance Daniel Stephen J. Dougan Edward K. Dunn Kurt A. Franke Daniel S. Glass John M. Goralka George R. Gore Randal W. Graves Vinton J. Hawkins George C. Hollister Thomas P. Infusino Bruce D. Jennett Thomas F. Klumper Victoria L. Knitter Timothy J. Long Bruce M. Notareus George F. Ogilvie, III Sharon Pogue Ranasinghe Lynn L. Rohwer Christopher L. Russell Grace K. Sakaguchi-Lally Victoria A. Sapunor Michael I. Sidley Chance L. Trimm Elizabeth S. Trimm Michael E. Vergara Lowell A. Warwick class of 1989 Mary D. Aguirre Monica A. Bennett Julia D. Brynelson Rex A. Cluff Jessica Cole Lawrence M. Cron Annette DeAndreis Michael P. Dolan Bradford J. Dozier Ruanne Dozier Virginia J. Dunlap Karen R. Forcum Marc C. Gessford Hank G. Greenblatt Aaron M. Gumbinger Michael A. Horowitz Mike H. Madokoro Kyle W. Memmott Robert E. Moss, Jr. Michael R. Nelson Stephen W. North L. Jeffrey Norwalk Lori L. K. Ozaki Carolyn L. Pirillo Valerie E. Quan Kathleen M. Rhoads Curtis D. Rindlisbacher Katherine A. Rojo del Busto Mario Rojo del Busto Dean W. Schirmer Peter C. Schreiber Ronald C. Schwarzkopf Michael D. Testerman Elise O. Thorn Thomas J. Welsh James C. Weydert Susan M. Wright Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 61 class of 1990 class of 1992 Susan A. Allen Leslie A. Arnal Paul M. Bertone Eric M. Bonzell Carrie L. Brown Mark A. Carroll Madison M. Christian Marshall N. Drack Richard T. Dudek Colleen M. Duffy Terry L. Higham Howard K. Hirahara Thomas J. Kearney Kathryn Kohlman Druliner Cynthia G. Lawrence Donna W. Low Marilyn H. Macey Linda Sebben Mathes Jeffrey A. Mitchell William A. Muha Thomas A. Neil Robert E. Oakes Barbara L. Ochsner James R. Palmer Paul J. Pascuzzi Richard M. Pattison James M. Ratzer David M. Rutz John S. Smith Carrie M. Stephens Gregory A. Tenorio class of 1991 Virginia D. Adams Maureen Meehan Aplin Garth W. Aubert William T. Babbitt Rod A. Baydaline Dave E. Blum James E. Brown R. Christine Brown Rosemary A. Bruckner Stephanie Tom Coupe David P. Cusick Angelo A. DuPlantier, III Jennifer Anderson Eason Matthew R. Eason Eric A. Elberg Carl L. Fessenden Deborah A. Glynn Joy F. Harn Andrew S. Levey Christopher M. Micheli Elaine A. Musser Frank M. Pacheco Linda R. Parke Bonnie Persons Thomas A. Richard Marcia A. Ross Trina L. Spivack Kenneth K. Tanji, Jr. Mark A. Tikosh class of 1993 Anonymous Raquel Birch Richard J. Burton Clay Calvert Laura Carrell-Stephan Paul Cass W. Gerald Chang Timothy P. Dailey Susan Rhodes Denious Sandra Lickiss Isom Mary L. Kennedy Bradford H. Lee David H. Levin Roy C. Levin Anna L. Locke Dirk L. Manoukian W. Kearse McGill Linda T. McKinney Kevin S. McMurray Milton G. Mullanax John S. Nitao Brian J. O’Connor Brian C. Pearcy Svetlana V. Petroff David L. Rowell Gregory D. Rueb Bruce A. Scheidt Karen Y. Uchiyama Robert S. Van Der Volgen, Jr. Plauche F. Villere, Jr. Richard T. Welsh Frederick G. Wiesner 62 P a c i f i c L aw Lynette S. Andersen Mark D. Ankcorn Mark D. Becker Katherine A. Beshak James T. Cahalan Cory B. Chartrand Eric S. Clarke Jason J. Curliano Christine J. Cusick Margaret Heiser Fulton William Davis Harn Thomas D. Hathaway Shelby L. Hladon Stephen R. Holden Michael F. Klein Mark S. Klitgaard Daniel V. Kohls Timothy J. Lopez Michael N. McCallum Patrick M. McGrath Joan M. Medeiros Allen C. Ostergar, III Geralynn Patellaro John D. Rose Anne Schmitz Steven A. Schwartz Morgan C. Smith Robert S. Tabor Vida L. Thomas Ann L. Trowbridge Ronn R. Uchihara John W. Wallace, Jr. Robert F. Whitworth Wendy C. York Summer 2011 class of 1994 Fernando S. Acosta Eric L. Barnum Tia Boatman Patterson Gordon G. Bones Christopher L. Brooks Paul C. Clauss Stephanie A. Clauss Dori L. Dennis Moorehead Leslie A. Dunsworth Candice L. Fields Kristian E. Foy Dimitri P. Gross Brian N. Gurwitz Y. Renee Gurwitz Kyle R. Hansen Todd A. Juchau Sharyn E. Kaplan Sheri L. Leonard Elan R. Levey Thomas R. Lewandowski Peter N. Lindquist Catherine C. MacMillan Guy E. Ortoleva Teri A. Ostling Gina C. Session Jennifer M. Settles William J. Staack Evan T. Sussman Mary L. Swanson Darius A. Vosylius class of 1995 Robert L. S. Angres Scott T. Blaising Jodie Hardmeyer Brokowski Margaret Carew Toledo Jeffrey L. Daniel Linda D. Deos Troy K. Dinin Edward B. Fischel Thomas E. Foran Molly C. Brueck Hanson Scott M. Hervey Carin C. Kaeser Christopher J. Kaeser Anna Kapetanakos Mark C. Krausse Mark H. LaRocque Matthew D. Marca Karen E. Michael Dean Pollack Steven M. Rotblatt Andrew F. Sackheim Alan M. Steinberg Cynthia K. Tuck Richard M. Wilner class of 1996 Doreen R. Altman Jason Borg Gordon W. Bowley Adrienne L. Brungess Linda S. Campbell Jeffrey B. Carra Paul Chan Lisa M. Cho William W. Davis Candy Dahl Goldman Christina M. Griffin Allyson C. Hall Kevin T. Hennessy Jeffery C. Hesseltine Karin S. Hesseltine Jackie M. Howard William S. Jue Jeannene L. Lafarga Catherine L. Manske Gustavo E. Matheus Steven A. McGee James R. McGuire Michelle S. Michaels Stephanie A. Miller Howard E. Moseley Jill Nathan Jess Negrete Frank J. Regan Amy H. Ruggles Charles C. Summerell Kristin J. Triepke Michael S. White class of 1997 Lenore L. Albert Anthony A. Babcock Christopher P. Blake Kimberley L. Dunn Christine Morse Galves Michael A. Guiliana Erik A. Hart Kelly Auerbach Hassel Paul K. Lee Bill McGee John P. McGill Timothy S. Naprawa Jennifer R. Pierce Matthew J. Rexroad Reynaldo C. Santos Lyle D. Solomon Wendy A. Taylor Kimberly D. Willy Linda Yackzan Leilani Yang class of 1998 Brian Andritch Susan G. Andritch Alex J. Aretakis Alan P. Baker Robert B. Bale Teri Block Robert W. Brannen Shawna Heinmiller Braun Joseph W. Carroll Brian J. Cassidy Sam Y. Chon Nicolaie Cocis Michelle E. Compton Benjamin A. Davies James M. Davis Tito P. De Leon, III Vera J. Divenyi Sean A. Dunston Jennifer L. Ferraiuolo David A. Flores-Workman Amanda Labrot Gilbert George R. Gillespie Alex T. Goetze Robert S. Gordon George A. Guthrie David E. Haddock Christine H. Long Donald J. Maher Caitlin Ross Manoogian Jason A. Manoogian Eric G. Masamori Randal C. McClendon Mike S. Mireles, Jr. Tracey L. O’Reilly Joe Paglieroni Rocco R. Paternoster Carlos A. Privat Daniela R. Razawi Nancy Armentrout Reagan Robert R. Schmitt Rama Sethi-Gulati Lana M. Shearer Victor D. Sipos Sarah B. Telschow Michael C. Weed Richard A. Wolf class of 1999 Dennis K. Albiani Stephanie M. Bamberger Janet E. Bender Gay L. Carroll Robin Chung Michael J. Daponde Kathryn M. Davis Richard V. De Gruccio Erin M. Dunston Amy L. Durbin Stefanie U. Hardy Ravi S. Hayashida Jason L. Jimenez Adam J. Krolikowski Brady D. McLeod Ralph R. Nevis, III Ann Leahy Piper Glen R. Piper Craig S. Robson Lance K. Terpstra Angela A. Trueblood class of 2000 Thomas M. Bloom James W. Brody Rebecca Bruch Lori D. Calvert Michael M. L. Ching Judith A. Cregan Jenny L. Darlington-Person Richard F. Desmond, Jr Lara Diaz Dunbar Margaret C. Felts Jacob D. Flesher Rex D. Frazier Daniel P. Golla Kellie Harrington Hartman Christian P. Kerry Alan G. LoFaso Charles H. McKeag Melissa A. McMillon Steven T. Naumchik Ovidio Oviedo Nina Santo Erica L. Seeman Stephen A. Smith Michael A. Sollazzo Maria L. Salazar Sperber Kerrie D. Webb Julia M. Young class of 2001 Bradley E. Angell Darren M. Bevan Amy H. Breitbart Chanel R. Brown Penelope R. Brown Andre M. Chernay Nilesh Choudhary Michael R. Dennis Geraldine E. Diaz Mary C. Garcia Pamela D. Gourley Adam A. Grable Casey J. LeClair Donald D. Lee Marie A. Nakamura James L. Nerli Jr Erin J. Radekin Lisa V. Ryan Shelley K. Scott Joseph M. Spector Samuel G. Stamas Melinda J. Steuer Emma Suarez Pawlicki Andrew P. Tauriainen Blake P. Temple class of 2002 Amir F. Adil Frances An Katherine Bellotti Porter Margaret M. Broussard Henry Chiu Jeffrey R. Dreiling Jack Duran, Jr. Monica E. Guillen John S. Immordino Kurtiss A. Jacobs Patricia C. Lonzo Karoleen N. Mito Khanh H. Nguyen Danesha Galbreith Nichols Carolynne J. Nocella Kim L. Penrose James C. Pettis Kelly Cesare Pfeiffer Brooke D. Pierman Sapphira Kwa Pixler Tiffani S. Sharp Manuel C. Sison Charles J. Stone Michelle L. Stowell Rodney C. Waterbury Andrew D. White Clara Yang class of 2003 Marie C. Ballon Anna Maria Bereczky-Anderson Kevin L. Bryant Scott N. Cameron Patricia Cano L. Michelle Chavis Julie Brown Cipolla Pete Cladianos Hector M. de Avila Gonzalez David G. Delaini Rania Habib Serineh Karapetian Carla R. Kralovic Anthony K. McClaren Courtney N. Nievergelt David C. O’Mara Joseph D. O’Neil Dorothy B. Osuna Yasha Rahimzadeh Ian A. Rambarran Tyler C. Roberts Eric D. Rouen John G. Roussas Beverly J. Shane Lara R. Shapiro Kimberly S. Sullivan Kimberlee Gerton Tsai Marianne L. Waterstradt class of 2004 Gina L. Anderson Brian P. Azemika Andrew L. Braden Chad C. Brooks David N. Chandler, Jr. Cynthia A. Condos Mauriah E. Conway Nirav K. Desai Jason P. Ebert Jennifer C. Ehn Eden Forsythe Erika S. Giorgi Catherine J. Goodin Jennifer V. Gore J. Michelle Hahn Jonathan R. Hayes Valerie J. Higgins Lori A. Hunt Dustin D. Johnson Darrin Lim Eunice C. Majam Erin K. Merrill Kristi A. Morioka Matthew J. Moye Anil Pai Shakira D. Pleasant Aaron S. Ralph David J. Ramirez Jeffrey T. Reed Joanne Delong Rodriguez Marisa L. Rubitz Catia C. Saraiva Rochelle I. Harry Swanson Thomas M. Swett Colleen D. Truden Cori Sarno Villacres Octavia V. Vrancuta Kelly J. Walls Alexis W. White Carleen M. Wood Ryan C. Wood Roy Yang Peter B. Zerbib class of 2005 David M. Bainbridge Joshua L. Baker Meghan M. Baker David H. Bartholomew Jason W. Burgess Matthew W. Darby Erika A. Englund Gregory K. Federico Michele Garfinkel Clemence George Kucera Ted Lindstrom Amie C. McTavish Philippe C. Melin Rebecca J. Olson Lynn H. Phan Heather L. Rae Stacey L. Roberts Casie M. Roussas Sayfe A. Salem Tiffany B. Scalia Theresa A. Stein Wendy S. Stultz Dawn C. Houston Sweatt Brian J. Ullmann Colleen Van Egmond-Avila John C. Whidden Matt R. Young class of 2006 Justin S. Altmann Brenna Arceo Jonette T. Banzon Amanda J. Barrett Andrea E. Bergquist John C. Bridges Sarah M. Carlson William P. Creger William J. Edgar James M. Edwards Cynthia J. Fee Carolyn J. Frank Macie J. Hawkes Craig A. Henderson Shannon R. Hochstein John P. Jarrett Tannaz L. Katen Norah C. Lamond Christopher B. Lee Teresa R. Leoni James B. Lynch Charlene A. Mattison Alice E. Mimms Benjamin J. Packard Katherine C. Pettibone Antonia M. Plazibat Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 63 Glenn N. Powell Jeremy B. Price Joel D. Rapaport Dimitrios T. Rigopoulos Juliette Tognetti Robertson Randee M. Sandlin Heidi L. Steinke Paul C. Steinke Molly K. Sword Mark R. Velasquez Elizabeth A. Vogel Jason R. Wagner Hanspeter Walter Roy L. Westfall Michelle L. Wiederhold Crystal D. Wood class of 2007 John H. Adams Richard C. Alpers Whitney E. Barazoto Daniel P. Custodio Leah D. Daughetee Paul T. Dolberg Derek B. Egge Patricia L. Eichar Patrick D. Holstine Hugh T. Huynh Jeena R. Jiampetti Pamela S. Jones Donald P. Kennedy Melissa J. Keyzer Noelle J. Lamprecht Miki R. Liviakis Jennifer M. Protas Mary K. Ross Craig A. Simmermon Justin J. Simpson Robin L. Singer Elizabeth A. Tanner Troy D. Vahidi Keith E. Van Wagner Andrea Johnson Velasquez Kevin A. Webb Grant A. Winter class of 2008 Bashar Ahmad Lila Y. Al-Marhoon Robert F. Bennett, Jr. Natalie S. Bustamante Daniel J. Croxall Hilary A. Dinkelspiel Theresa R. Esquerra Melissa A. Faber Annette E. Ferrante James J. Franco Paula Gluzman Justin M. Graham Mira C. Guertin Jennifer A. Hemmer Brooke P. Hennessy Luke A. Homen Lindsey C. Hulse Michael B. Indrajana Brent Y. Jo Kimberly L. Kakavas 64 P a c i f i c L aw Amy L. Kendrick Daniel A. King Joseph F. Klatt Brian K. Lee Courtney G. Lee Ralph C. Lee Wenyan Luo Johanne C. Medina Lee E. Meisner Donald J. Miller Brooke N. Moller Jared S. Mueller Andrew M. Nguyen Elizabeth Dietzen Olsen Rizaldy T. Ortiz Ingrid K. Petersen Veronica J. Philipp Christina E. Poley Leslie R. Ramos Stephanie D. Reid Virginia G. Rogers Robert D. Roth Marcia M. Ruf Carsen P. Smith Kara B. Stein Kelly O’Rourke Thomas Kellie R. Vasen Maria Wilson Mario U. Zamora class of 2009 Inderjit S. Ahluwalia Anonymous Asukwo M. Archibong Chad T. Bacchus Christina Carroll Adrian R. Contreras Natalie A. Cordellos Dirk A. Daza John F. Doyle Daniel H. Drummy Keren Feingold Justin S. Freeborn Richard K. Gilbert Carly A. Gregory Megan E. Herberger Stephanie M. Hodson Jennifer B. Holdener Allysia D. Holland Yury A. Kolesnikov Shawnee S. Lane Isabel Y. Liou Tricia L. Manning Sean C. McGah Andrew O. Meditz Colin W. Mills Christopher J. Moenig Preston L. Morgan Sally Gohlke Noma Matthew J. Olson Kelsey E. Papst Kathryn L. Patterson Joseph M. Penney Luke N. Pollock Adam B. Shoor Megan R. Sullivan Summer 2011 Rachel E. Ward Jeremy P. West Dana K. Wolheim Jacqueline C. Zee class of 2010 Fareena Siddiqui Azhar Mary Bajo Katey P. Bakerjian Katie E. Belisle Andrew S. Bernick Laurel A. Berzanskis Kristin A. Blocher Dana R. Botello Jennie L. Bretschneider Jillian E. Brown Ileana Butu Kara Rosenberg Cain Mark L. Carlson Christopher D. Cavagnaro Christopher R. Chin Juliet H. Cho James E. Coffey Sean R. Coletta Christopher J. Cook Katherine Larsen Cook Tiffany D. Corona Diane E. Crawford Sarah R. Dansereau Mallory E. DeLauro Sarah E. Donald Cody A. Drabble Joanna Duenas Olena Eckert Christine A. Elliott Emily Foehr Dayna M. Gariby Shelby M. Gatlin Heather E. Gibbons Melissa S. Greenidge TeriAnn Grimes Rebekah L. Grodsky Evelyn A. Grosenick Ray D. Hacke Samuel C. Hall Christine Hansen Alex S. Harary Sheila A. Hard Jenni L. Harmon Tyler V. Heath Julia A. Himovitz Emily R. Hirsekorn Caitlin E. Howard Michelle A. Howland Michael B. Ipson Jessica Jagir Joel A. Kane Joel E. Kautz C. Daniel Kim Alexis M. Klein Lydia V. Ko Katie Konz Michelle L. Kral Lauren D. Layne Nubia Lemus May Ling Leong Samuel J. Levy Adam D. Link Robert L. Lopez Michelle D. Low Stephanie Maroun Lilka B. Martinez Catherine R. G. Mattesich Thelonius C. M. McCann Jennifer Lee L. Mendoza David E. Meyerson Brian J. Miller Mikyla J. Miller Julie T. Nguyen Jarrett C. Noble Young L. Park Lesya N. Paulovich Zachary B. Powell Courtney M. Przybylski Katherine I. Rankin Andrew B. Reisinger Brooks V. Rice Robert B. Rice, III Cheryl P. Robertson Brittany E. Rupley Gabriel A. Rutherford Dustin Saiidi Melissa D. Sato Kristine M. Scribner Cheryl M. Shitabata Michael J. Snoke Stanley Su Alexandra S. Thomas Joseph B. Thuesen Spencer R. Tressler Blair D. Trigg Seaton Tsai Sarah M. Van Slyke Gilberto B. Vega Colleen R. Villarreal Blair H. Widders David R. Wiksell Jennifer C. Woo Joanna Yum Jennet Zapata Grant R. Zehnder students Anthony D. Bento Nicholas T. Chan Justin W. Chong Carmen-Nicole Cox Donald G. Gensler Jessica R. Lee Johanna E. Michael Andrea S. Moon James P. Sammut Brian J. Schall Diana L. Schall Brian A. Segal Christopher A. Skelton Conness A. Thompson Kristin M. Weigle Vanessa C. Whitnell Ryan J. Yates GORDON D. SCHABER LEGACY SOCIETY M c G e o rg e S c h o o l o f L a w T he Gordon D. Schaber Legacy Society is made up of our alumni and friends who have included, or have notified us of their intention to include Pacific McGeorge in their estate planning or will. These families and individuals have made a long-term commitment to the law school – they have planned a legacy that will exist beyond their life and into perpetuity. We would like to thank all of those who are listed on this page for their gifts and commitment to the law school. We would also like to thank our newest members who have informed us of their intent over the past year. SCHABER LEGACY SOCIETY Includes individuals that have included Pacific McGeorge in their estate plan, and have either made or will make a planned gift. James Adams* Rosalie S. Asher* Irving H. Biele* Katharine O. Biele* Steven A. & Teri Block John Brownston* Dona Buckingham Robert F. Butler* Peggy Chater-Turner Joseph Cooper Helen H. Crittenden Loren S. Dahl* Margaret K. Distler Mark S. Drobny Glenn A. Fait Robert O. Fort* Louis F. Gianelli Gregory Graves Lawrence B. Hagel Eleanor L. Hale Sheila Hard Scott & Andrea Hervey Phil Hiroshima Ben E. Johnson Frank La Bella* Daniel R. Lang R. Marilyn Lee & Harvey Schneider James R. Lewis Patricia K. Lundvall Sharon L. McDonald* Hayne R. & Susan Moyer Ramon E. Nunez Laraine C. Patching Ronald G. Peck Marc D. Roberts Georgia A. Rose* *Indiates Deceased Anthony J. Scalora* Arthur G. Scotland Edward D. (Ned) & Carol Spurgeon Doris Stark* Donald Steed Sandra E. Stockman Susan & Joe Taylor Barbara Thomas Bradley S. Towne ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS Pacific McGeorge endowments that support student scholarships: James & Dorothy Adams Memorial Scholarship Ahmanson Foundation Scholarship Walter F. Alexander, III Memorial Scholarship Alumni Endowed Scholarship Robert, Aimee & Rosalie Asher Scholarship Asian-American Scholarship Bales Family Endowment Raymond Henry Biele, II Memorial Scholarship Raymond Burr Memorial Scholarship Dean Gerald Caplan Endowed Scholarship Carpenters’ Local Union 586 Scholarship Jerome J. Curtis, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Judge Loren S. Dahl Award Charles D. Driscoll Labor Award European Programs Endowed Scholarship Anna Rose Fischer Scholarship Stanley B. Fowler Memorial Scholarship Become a Legacy Society Member If you have already included, or are interested in including Pacific McGeorge as part of your estate plan, please contact us and we will mail you information about the Schaber Legacy Society, its activities and recognition efforts. We also want to be sure that your gift is used as you deem, so communication will ensure we understand your wishes. A named charitable endowment can be established to support programs and scholarships starting at $25,000. A planned gift is a great way to establish a lasting legacy at Pacific McGeorge and a meaningful way to support students. Visit our website for great information, articles and examples on: Transfer of Wealth Issues, Setting up Annuities, Charitable Remainder Trusts, Life Insurance Gifts, IRA Rollover Gifts, Estate and Tax Law Updates. www.mcgeorgelegacy.org Benjamin D. & Verdele R. Frantz Scholarship B. Abbott Goldberg Memorial Scholarship Sam Gordon Memorial Scholarship Martin Gross Scholarship Hawaii Scholarship Fund Tracy G. Helms Memorial Scholarship Brian L. Hintz Memorial Scholarship Hiroshima, Jacobs, Roth and Lewis Scholarship Anthony M. Kennedy Constitutional Law Scholarship Kierney Family Endowed Scholarship William Russell Knudson Memorial Scholarship Ken and Bonnie Jean Kwong Scholarship Frank & Joann LaBella Scholarship Latino Law Students Association Scholarship Albert & Mae Lee Memorial Scholarship E.M. Manning, Jr. Endowed Fund for Single Parents John A. McCarthy Foundation Scholarship Tom McNally Memorial Book Award Carol J. Miller Memorial Scholarship Hon. William K. Morgan Endowed Scholarship John P. Morris Memorial Scholarship Nevada Alumni Endowed Scholarship Amy Olson Memorial Scholarship Edwina V. Pfund Memorial Scholarship Jeffrey K. Poilé Gay & Lesbian Civil Rights Memorial Scholarship Marc and Mona Roberts Labor Law Scholarship Annie M. Rogaski Endowed Scholarship for Women in Science & Law David C. Rust Memorial Scholarship Sacramento Bee Legal Scholars Program Sacramento Estate Planning Council Scholarship Kamal Ramsey Sadek Memorial Scholarship Susan J. Samans Memorial Scholarship Philomena Scalora Memorial Scholarship Gary V. Schaber Memorial Scholarship Diana P. Scott Prizes for the Four Finalists of the McGeorge School of Law Appellate Advocacy Competition Judge Elvin F. & Pauline C. Sheehy Scholarship O. Robert Simons Memorial Book Award Robert N. & Doris D. Stark Endowed Scholarship R.T. Stratton Memorial Book Award Albert Frederick Zangerle Memorial Scholarship Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this list, if you cannot find your name or feel your listing might be inaccurate, please call our Advancement Office at 916.739.7300. Summer 2011 P a c i f i c L aw 65 t h e l a s t wo r d Moot Court’s Greatest Season P acific McGeorge has a long and illustrious history in national and international moot court competitions. That’s what makes this year’s performance by our student teams even more impressive. After the law school graduated its first Day Division classes in the early 1970s, the late Dean Gordon Schaber decided that intercollegiate competitions were a good vehicle for showing off the academic prowess of the relatively unknown Sacramento law school. Pacific McGeorge teams won best memorial awards for outstanding writing in the Philip C. Jessup International Moot Court (1975, 1980), finished second nationally and won a best brief award in the National Moot Court (1977), and took top writing honors in the Roger J. Traynor Moot Court (1975, 1977). In 1981, Pacific McGeorge really established itself as a national power by winning the Jessup title. Previous winners in the competition that had begun 21 years earlier included Columbia, Duke, Georgetown, Michigan, Texas and Vanderbilt. In 1982, Pacific McGeorge shocked the top-ranked law schools in the country by winning the title again. Victories were harder to come by in the next two decades, but the Pacific McGeorge program has grown in recent years under the leadership of Professor Ed Telfeyan, ’74, making several appearances in the NAAC nationals and other. This year, Pacific McGeorge fielded a 21-person team stocked with the best and brightest 3D and 4E students from the GLS II program and backed by research assistants. Mark Narveson, ’11, a star of last year’s team, served as the executive operations officer. The results were impressive as you can see from these highlights. Photography: Steve Yeater 32nd Annual National Appellate Advocacy Competition Team One — Second Place, National Championship Team Two — Best Brief, National Championship Top row, Leo Moniz, Caitlin Urie Christian, Kim Bowman Jr., Conness Thompson First row, Jill Larrabee, Professor Ed Telfeyan, Jeremy Ehrlich 7th Annual International Criminal Court Competition Second Place, United States World Championship Qualifier Scott Radcliffe, Susan Booth, Krystal Collins, David Magnan 39th Annual Roger J. Traynor Competition Bernard E. Witkin Award — Best Overall Team Brandon Esraelian, Corrie Erickson, Brad Coutinho 20th Annual Saul Lefkowitz IP Competition Second Place and Best Oralist, Regional 13th National Entertainment Competition Best Petitioner Brief Chris Braniff, Gianni Pattas, Blaire Sederoff 44th Annual Niagara International Competition Third Place Best Applicant Memorial Catherine Mariano, Matt Vance, Elyssia Musolino 19th Annual Thomas Tang Competition Second Place, Regional National Championship Qualifier Etan Zaitsu, Catherine Mariano 66 P a c i f i c L aw Summer 2011 ONE PERSON CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE EXPLORE What you can do for Pacific McGeorge students. Calendar of Events For details on these and other events, please see the Alumni and News & Events sections on the Pacific McGeorge web site www.mcgeorge.edu or call 916.739.7141 May 18, 2011 Essential Lawyering Skills: Legal Research & Writing Pacific McGeorge May 24, 2011 Sacramento Alumni Chapter Reception Crocker Art Museum May 25, 2011 Bakersfield Alumni Chapter Reception The Padre Hotel, Bakersfield May 26, 2011 San Diego Alumni Chapter Reception Best, Best & Krieger, San Diego June 23-25, 2011 Association of Legal Writing Directors Biennial Conference Pacific McGeorge August 18, 2011 Annual Welcome Back Barbecue Pacific McGeorge September 17, 2011 Legal Studies Center Grand Opening Pacific McGeorge Chair: $500 Shelving Unit: $5k-$15k Study Room: $25k-$75k Large Study Table: $10k Pacific McGeorge (See mcgeorge.edu, Campus Event Spotlight) Leave a Lasting Legacy in Pacific McGeorge History Renovation of the Gordon D. Schaber Law Library – centerpiece of the new Pacific McGeorge Legal Studies Center (LSC) – is almost complete. Take this opportunity to leave a lasting legacy by giving a gift that secures your right to attach your name or that of someone special to Pacific McGeorge’s future. Many naming opportunities are still available. You can name a study room, a study carrel, a shelving unit, a chair, or even the Rotunda – the law school’s original classroom. Contact the Advancement Office today to see how your investment in the LSC will inspire students, alumni, and our campus community for years to come. Join those who have already named an area or room in the LSC: • Alumni Board of Directors (Current and Past Members) • McGeorge Rugby Club • Nevada Alumni • The Fletcher Jones Foundation • The Hugh & Hazel Darling Foundation October 7-9 and 14-16, 2011 Executive Training Program in Mediation October 11, 2011 Capital Center for Public Law & Policy Ethics Luncheon The Sutter Club, Sacramento October 15, 2011 Reunion: Classes of 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976, 1981, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2006 Pacific McGeorge January 21, 2012 Alumni Association’s Southern California MCLE The Grand, Long Beach January 28, 2012 Alumni Association’s Sacramento MCLE Pacific McGeorge Scan this QR Code with your smart phone to visit the LSC website. go.mcgeorge.edu/lsc Pacific McGeorge Office of Advancement | 3200 Fifth Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95817 | 916.739.7300 June 4, 2012 U.S. Supreme Court Swearing-In Ceremony Washington, D.C. Pacific Law Magazine is published by University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law Office of Strategic Marketing and Communications 3200 Fifth Avenue Sacramento, California 95817 916.739.7197 916.739.7384 Fax www.mcgeorge.edu Member The Order of the Coif Member The Association of American Law Schools Accredited by The American Bar Association and the Committee of Bar Examiners, State Bar of California Editor Michael Curran Editorial Committee Elizabeth Rindskopf Parker, Dean; Barbara Thomas, Director, Alumni Relations & Campus Events; Charlene Mattison, Assistant Dean for Advancement; David Alan Gibb, Consultant Principal Photography Steve Yeater, John Blaustein Acknowledgments Courtney Nowling, Lovelle Harris, Bethany Daniels, Lori Hall, Sally Cebreros, Megan Laurie, Matthew Downs, Lexis Allen Printing Citadel Communications Design NeoDesign 2011 © University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law NonProfit Organization the publication of the universit y of the pacific mcgeorge school of l aw U.S. Postage Paid Sacramento, California 3200 Fifth Avenue Permit No. 904 Sacramento, California 95817 Summer 2011 www.mcgeorge.edu Face to Face with the U.S. Supreme Court